Archive for August 3rd, 2008

Mediation Channel goes to reruns during August - regular programming resumes soon!I’m taking a short break from blogging to goof off, hang out with my family, and recharge my batteries. I’ll be back some time next week, when Mediation Channel returns with its regularly scheduled programming.

If you’d like to catch some reruns, check out the Archives Page, where you can find over three years’ worth of posts. (On the Archives Page, click on “Expand All Posts” for a complete list of titles arranged in chronological order.) Or, take a look through the list of categories over there in the left sidebar.

Whether you’re a new reader or an old friend, thanks as always for stopping by. (Hey, what are you doing indoors on your computer anyway? Get outside and enjoy that sunshine.)

Comments No Comments »

Conjuring up ways to improve awareness thanks to magicA skilled magician can make us see what isn’t there. We watch the silver dollar vanish but not the magician deftly palm the coin. Magic is filled with tricks — games played with our perception as the magician misdirects our attention.

It is magic’s ability to manipulate our awareness that has earned it not only the delight of audiences but also the attention of the field of neuroscience, according to “How magicians control your mind,” an article in today’s Boston Globe:

As magicians have long known and neuroscientists are increasingly discovering, human perception is a jury-rigged apparatus, full of gaps and easily manipulated. The collaboration between science and magic is still young, and the findings preliminary, but interest among scholars is only growing: the New York Academy of Science has invited the magician Apollo Robbins to give a presentation in January on the science of vision, and a team of magicians is scheduled to speak at next year’s annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, the world’s largest organization of brain researchers.

The ability to manage our attention better and to close the gaps in our perception holds implications for many kinds of activities and endeavors — think, for example, of driving, just to name one that demands an alert and attentive actor:

The control and management of attention is vital in all sorts of realms. Airplane cockpits and street signs would be designed better, security guards would be trained to be more alert, computer graphics would feel more natural, teaching less coercive.

And only imagine what the management of attention might mean for lawyers and judges, for mediators and negotiators.

The Boston Globe article includes links to three videos that demonstrate our cognitive gaps - and how easily our attention gets diverted. In one a magician demonstrates his skills in misdirecting his audience’s attention at a gathering of scientists; the second depicts two magic tricks, including a vanishing ball illusion; and the third is the well known gorilla-and-basketball video, discussed here before at Mediation Channel.

Comments 3 Comments »

©Copyright 2005-2008 Diane J. Levin. The material on this blog is provided for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice or as creating an attorney-client relationship. This blog should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a licensed professional attorney in your state. Under the Rules of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, this material may be considered advertising.