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Alice Pailhès

Showing results (1-10 of 9) with videos related to

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Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2006)|June 2, 2020
The apparent action causation: Using a magician forcing technique to investigate our illusory sense of agency over the outcome of our choicesAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|January 8, 2021
Reply to Cole: Magic and deception-do magicians mislead science?Alice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Psychological Research|May 16, 2020
Subtly encouraging more deliberate decisions: using a forcing technique and population stereotype to investigate free willAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Trends in Cognitive Sciences|February 28, 2021
Mind Control Tricks: Magicians' Forcing and Free WillAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|July 15, 2020
Influencing choices with conversational primes: How a magic trick unconsciously influences card choicesAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Consciousness and Cognition|March 3, 2020
Forcing you to experience wonder: Unconsciously biasing people's choice through strategic physical positioningGustav Kuhn, Alice Pailhès, Yuxuan Lan
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|November 30, 2020
The magician's choice: Providing illusory choice and sense of agency with the equivoque forcing techniqueAlice Pailhès, Shringi Kumari, Gustav Kuhn
Peerj|June 6, 2022
Too perfect to be good? An investigation of magicians' Too Perfect TheoryAlice Pailhès, Kole Lee, Gustav Kuhn
Consciousness and Cognition|November 6, 2020
A psychologically based taxonomy of Magicians' forcing Techniques: How magicians influence our choices, and how to use this to study psychological mechanismsAlice Pailhès, Ronald A Rensink, Gustav Kuhn
Pageof 1

Showing results (1-10 of 9) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 1
Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology (2006)|June 2, 2020
The apparent action causation: Using a magician forcing technique to investigate our illusory sense of agency over the outcome of our choicesAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|January 8, 2021
Reply to Cole: Magic and deception-do magicians mislead science?Alice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Psychological Research|May 16, 2020
Subtly encouraging more deliberate decisions: using a forcing technique and population stereotype to investigate free willAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Trends in Cognitive Sciences|February 28, 2021
Mind Control Tricks: Magicians' Forcing and Free WillAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|July 15, 2020
Influencing choices with conversational primes: How a magic trick unconsciously influences card choicesAlice Pailhès, Gustav Kuhn
Consciousness and Cognition|March 3, 2020
Forcing you to experience wonder: Unconsciously biasing people's choice through strategic physical positioningGustav Kuhn, Alice Pailhès, Yuxuan Lan
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|November 30, 2020
The magician's choice: Providing illusory choice and sense of agency with the equivoque forcing techniqueAlice Pailhès, Shringi Kumari, Gustav Kuhn
Peerj|June 6, 2022
Too perfect to be good? An investigation of magicians' Too Perfect TheoryAlice Pailhès, Kole Lee, Gustav Kuhn
Consciousness and Cognition|November 6, 2020
A psychologically based taxonomy of Magicians' forcing Techniques: How magicians influence our choices, and how to use this to study psychological mechanismsAlice Pailhès, Ronald A Rensink, Gustav Kuhn
Pageof 1