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TED Talks - Most Popular - The art of misdirection

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Hailed as the greatest pickpocket in the world, Apollo Robbins studies the quirks of human behavior as he steals your watch. In a hilarious demonstration, Robbins samples the buffet of the TEDGlobal 2013 audience, showing how the flaws in our perception make it possible to swipe a wallet and leave it on its owner’s shoulder while they remain clueless.

Do
you
think
it's
possible
to
control
someone's
attention?
Even
more
than
that,
what
about
predicting
human
behavior?
I
think
those
are
interesting
ideas.
For
me,
that
would
be
the
perfect
superpower,
actually
kind
of
an
evil
way
of
approaching
it.
But
for
myself,
in
the
past,
I've
spent
the
last
20
years
studying
human
behavior
from
a
rather
unorthodox
way:
picking
pockets.
When
we
think
of
misdirection,
we
think
of
something
as
looking
off
to
the
side,
when
actually
the
things
right
in
front
of
us
are
often
the
hardest
to
see,
the
things
that
you
look
at
every
day
that
you're
blinded
to.
For
example,
how
many
of
you
still
have
your
cell
phones
on
you
right
now?
Great.
Double-check.
Make
sure
you
still
have
them.
I
was
doing
some
shopping
before.
(Laughter)
You've
looked
at
them
a
few
times
today,
but
I'll
ask
you
a
question.
Without
looking
at
it
directly
yet,
can
you
remember
the
icon
in
the
bottom
right
corner?
Bring
them
out,
check
and
see
how
accurate
you
were.
How'd
you
do?
Show
of
hands.
Did
we
get
it?
Now
that
you're
done,
close
them
down.
Every
phone
has
something
in
common.
No
matter
how
you
organize
the
icons,
you
still
have
a
clock
on
the
front.
So,
without
looking
at
your
phone,
what
time
was
it?
You
just
looked
at
your
clock,
right?
Interesting
idea.
Let's
take
that
a
step
further
with
a
game
of
trust.
Close
your
eyes.
I
realize
I'm
asking
you
to
do
that
while
you
just
heard
there's
a
pickpocket
in
the
room,
but
close
your
eyes.
Now,
you've
been
watching
me
for
about
30
seconds.
With
your
eyes
closed,
what
am
I
wearing?
Make
your
best
guess.
What
color
is
my
shirt?
What
color
is
my
tie?
Now
open
your
eyes.
Show
of
hands,
were
you
right?
Interesting,
isn't
it?
Some
of
us
are
a
little
bit
more
perceptive
than
others,
it
seems.
But
I
have
a
different
theory
about
that
model
of
attention.
They
have
fancy
models
of
attention,
Posner's
trinity
model
of
attention.
For
me,
I
like
to
think
of
it
very
simple,
like
a
surveillance
system.
It's
kind
of
like
you
have
all
these
fancy
sensors,
and
inside
your
brain
is
a
little
security
guard.
For
me,
I
like
to
call
him
Frank.
So
Frank
is
sitting
at
a
desk.
He's
got
lots
of
cool
information
in
front
of
him,
high-tech
equipment,
he's
got
cameras,
he's
got
a
little
phone
that
he
can
pick
up,
listen
to
the
ears,
all
these
senses,
all
these
perceptions.
But
attention
is
what
steers
your
perceptions,
it's
what
controls
your
reality.
It's
the
gateway
to
the
mind.
If
you
don't
attend
to
something,
you
can't
be
aware
of
it.
But
ironically,
you
can
attend
to
something
without
being
aware
of
it.
For
example,
the
cocktail
effect:
You're
in
a
party,
having
conversations
with
someone,
and
yet
you
can
recognize
your
name
without
realizing
you
were
listening
to
that.
Now,
for
my
job,
I
have
to
play
with
techniques
to
exploit
this,
to
play
with
your
attention
as
a
limited
resource.
So
if
I
could
control
how
you
spend
your
attention,
if
I
could
maybe
steal
your
attention
through
a
distraction.
Now,
instead
of
doing
it
like
misdirection
and
throwing
it
off
to
the
side,
instead,
what
I
choose
to
focus
on
is
Frank,
to
be
able
to
play
with
the
Frank
inside
your
head,
your
security
guard,
and
get
you,
instead
of
focusing
on
your
external
senses,
just
to
go
internal
for
a
second.
So
if
I
ask
you
to
access
a
memory,
like,
what
is
that?
What
just
happened?
Do
you
have
a
wallet?
Do
you
have
an
American
Express
in
your
wallet?
And
when
I
do
that,
your
Frank
turns
around.
He
accesses
the
file.
He
has
to
rewind
the
tape.
What's
interesting
is,
he
can't
rewind
the
tape
at
the
same
time
that
he's
trying
to
process
new
data.
This
sounds
like
a
good
theory,
but
I
could
talk
for
a
long
time,
tell
you
lots
of
things,
and
a
portion
of
them
may
be
true,
but
I
think
it's
better
if
I
tried
to
show
that
to
you
here
live.
If
I
come
down,
I'm
going
to
do
a
bit
of
shopping.
Just
hold
still
where
you
are.
Hello,
how
are
you?
It's
lovely
to
see
you.
Wonderful
job
onstage.
Lovely
watch,
it
doesn't
come
off
very
well.
Do
you
have
a
ring
as
well?
Good.
Just
taking
inventory.
You're
like
a
buffet.
Hard
to
tell
where
to
start,
so
many
great
things.
Hi,
how
are
you?
Good
to
see
you.
Hi,
sir,
could
you
stand
up,
please?
Just
right
where
you
are.
You're
married,
you
follow
directions
well.
Nice
to
meet
you,
sir.
You
don't
have
a
lot
in
your
pockets.
Anything
down
here?
Hopefully
so.
Have
a
seat.
There
you
go.
You're
doing
well.
Hi,
sir,
how
are
you?
Good
to
see
you,
sir.
You
have
a
ring,
a
watch.
Do
you
have
a
wallet
on
you?
Joe:
I
don't.
AR:
Well,
we'll
find
one
for
you.
Come
on
up
this
way,
Joe.
Give
Joe
a
round
of
applause.
Come
on
up,
Joe.
Let's
play
a
game.
(Applause)
AR:
Pardon
me.
I
don't
think
I
need
this
clicker
anymore.
Thank
you
very
much.
I
appreciate
that.
Come
on
up
to
the
stage,
Joe.
Let's
play
a
little
game
now.
Anything
in
your
front
pockets?
J:
Money.
AR:
Money!
All
right,
let's
try
that.
Can
you
stand
right
over
this
way
for
me?
Turn
around
and,
let's
see,
if
I
give
you
something
that
belongs
to
me,
this
is
just
something
I
have,
a
poker
chip.
Hold
out
your
hand
for
me.
Watch
it
closely.
This
is
a
task
for
you
to
focus
on.
You
have
your
money
in
your
front
pocket?
J:
Yup.
AR:
Good.
I
won't
put
my
hand
in
your
pocket.
I'm
not
ready
for
that
kind
of
commitment.
Once
a
guy
had
a
hole
in
his
pocket,
and
that
was
rather
traumatizing
for
me.
I
wanted
his
wallet,
he
gave
me
his
number.
Big
miscommunication.
(Laughter)
Let's
do
this
simply.
Squeeze
your
hand
tight.
Do
you
feel
the
poker
chip
in
your
hand?
J:
I
do.
AR:
Would
you
be
surprised
if
I
took
it?
Say
yes.
J:
Very.
AR:
Good.
Open
your
hand.
Thank
you
very
much.
I'll
cheat
if
you
give
me
a
chance.
Make
it
harder
for
me.
Just
use
your
hand.
Grab
my
wrist,
but
squeeze,
squeeze
firm.
Did
you
see
it
go?
Joe:
No.
AR:
No,
it's
not
here.
Open
your
hand.
While
we're
focused
on
the
hand,
it's
sitting
on
your
shoulder.
Go
ahead
and
take
it
off.
Now,
let's
try
that
again.
Hold
your
hand
out
flat.
Open
it
up.
Put
your
hand
up
a
little
bit
higher,
but
watch
it
close.
If
I
did
it
slowly,
it'd
be
on
your
shoulder.
(Laughter)
Joe,
we're
going
to
keep
doing
this
till
you
catch
it.
You'll
get
it
eventually.
I
have
faith
in
you.
Squeeze
firm.
You're
human,
you're
not
slow.
It's
back
on
your
shoulder.
You
were
focused
on
your
hand,
distracted.
While
you
were
watching,
I
couldn't
get
your
watch
off.
Yet
you
had
something
inside
your
pocket.
Do
you
remember
what
it
was?
J:
Money.
AR:
Check
your
pocket.
Is
it
still
there?
(Laughter)
Oh,
there
it
was.
Put
it
away.
We're
just
shopping.
This
trick's
more
about
the
timing.
I'm
going
to
try
to
push
it
inside
your
hand.
Put
your
other
hand
on
top,
would
you?
It's
amazingly
obvious
now,
isn't
it?
Looks
a
lot
like
the
watch
I
was
wearing,
doesn't
it?
(Laughter)
(Applause)
J:
That's
pretty
good.
AR:
Oh,
thanks.
(Applause)
But
it's
only
a
start.
Let's
try
it
a
little
bit
differently.
Hold
your
hands
together.
Your
other
hand
on
top.
If
you're
watching
this
little
token,
this
obviously
has
become
a
little
target,
like
a
red
herring.
If
we
watch
this
kind
of
close,
it
looks
like
it
goes
away.
It's
not
back
on
your
shoulder.
It
falls
out
of
the
air,
lands
right
back
in
the
hand.
Did
you
see
it
go?
Yeah,
funny.
We've
got
a
little
guy.
He's
union,
works
up
there
all
day.
If
I
do
it
slowly
it
goes
straight
away,
it
lands
by
your
pocket.
Is
it
in
this
pocket,
sir?
Don't
reach
in
your
pocket.
That's
a
different
show.
(Squeaking)
That's
rather
strange.
They
have
shots
for
that.
Can
I
show
them?
Rather
bizarre.
Is
this
yours,
sir?
I
have
no
idea
how
that
works.
We'll
send
that
over
there.
I
need
help
with
this
one.
Step
over
this
way
for
me.
Don't
run
away.
You
had
something
down
by
your
pants
pocket.
I
was
checking
mine.
I
couldn't
find
everything,
but
I
noticed
you
had
something
here.
Can
I
feel
the
outside
for
a
moment?
Down
here
I
noticed
this.
Is
this
something
of
yours,
sir?
I
have
no
idea.
That's
a
shrimp.
J:
Yeah.
I'm
saving
it
for
later.
AR:
You've
entertained
all
of
these
people
in
a
wonderful
way,
better
than
you
know.
So
we'd
love
to
give
you
this
lovely
watch
as
a
gift.
(Laughter)
Hopefully
it
matches
his
taste.
We
have
a
couple
of
other
things,
a
little
bit
of
cash.
And
we
have
a
few
other
things,
these
all
belong
to
you,
along
with
a
big
round
of
applause
from
all
your
friends.
(Applause)
Joe,
thank
you
very
much.
(Applause)
(Applause
ends)
So,
same
question
I
asked
you
before,
but
this
time
you
don't
have
to
close
your
eyes.
What
am
I
wearing?
Audience:
Oh!
(Laughter)
(Hesitant
applause)
(Applause
ends)
Attention
is
a
powerful
thing.
Like
I
said,
it
shapes
your
reality.
So,
I
guess
I'd
like
to
pose
that
question
to
you.
If
you
could
control
somebody's
attention,
what
would
you
do
with
it?
Thank
you.
(Applause)
Check out more TED Talks - Most Popular

See below for the full transcript

Do you think it's possible to control someone's attention? Even more than that, what about predicting human behavior? I think those are interesting ideas. For me, that would be the perfect superpower, actually kind of an evil way of approaching it. But for myself, in the past, I've spent the last 20 years studying human behavior from a rather unorthodox way: picking pockets. When we think of misdirection, we think of something as looking off to the side, when actually the things right in front of us are often the hardest to see, the things that you look at every day that you're blinded to. For example, how many of you still have your cell phones on you right now? Great. Double-check. Make sure you still have them. I was doing some shopping before. (Laughter) You've looked at them a few times today, but I'll ask you a question. Without looking at it directly yet, can you remember the icon in the bottom right corner? Bring them out, check and see how accurate you were. How'd you do? Show of hands. Did we get it? Now that you're done, close them down. Every phone has something in common. No matter how you organize the icons, you still have a clock on the front. So, without looking at your phone, what time was it? You just looked at your clock, right? Interesting idea. Let's take that a step further with a game of trust. Close your eyes. I realize I'm asking you to do that while you just heard there's a pickpocket in the room, but close your eyes. Now, you've been watching me for about 30 seconds. With your eyes closed, what am I wearing? Make your best guess. What color is my shirt? What color is my tie? Now open your eyes. Show of hands, were you right? Interesting, isn't it? Some of us are a little bit more perceptive than others, it seems. But I have a different theory about that model of attention. They have fancy models of attention, Posner's trinity model of attention. For me, I like to think of it very simple, like a surveillance system. It's kind of like you have all these fancy sensors, and inside your brain is a little security guard. For me, I like to call him Frank. So Frank is sitting at a desk. He's got lots of cool information in front of him, high-tech equipment, he's got cameras, he's got a little phone that he can pick up, listen to the ears, all these senses, all these perceptions. But attention is what steers your perceptions, it's what controls your reality. It's the gateway to the mind. If you don't attend to something, you can't be aware of it. But ironically, you can attend to something without being aware of it. For example, the cocktail effect: You're in a party, having conversations with someone, and yet you can recognize your name without realizing you were listening to that. Now, for my job, I have to play with techniques to exploit this, to play with your attention as a limited resource. So if I could control how you spend your attention, if I could maybe steal your attention through a distraction. Now, instead of doing it like misdirection and throwing it off to the side, instead, what I choose to focus on is Frank, to be able to play with the Frank inside your head, your security guard, and get you, instead of focusing on your external senses, just to go internal for a second. So if I ask you to access a memory, like, what is that? What just happened? Do you have a wallet? Do you have an American Express in your wallet? And when I do that, your Frank turns around. He accesses the file. He has to rewind the tape. What's interesting is, he can't rewind the tape at the same time that he's trying to process new data. This sounds like a good theory, but I could talk for a long time, tell you lots of things, and a portion of them may be true, but I think it's better if I tried to show that to you here live. If I come down, I'm going to do a bit of shopping. Just hold still where you are. Hello, how are you? It's lovely to see you. Wonderful job onstage. Lovely watch, it doesn't come off very well. Do you have a ring as well? Good. Just taking inventory. You're like a buffet. Hard to tell where to start, so many great things. Hi, how are you? Good to see you. Hi, sir, could you stand up, please? Just right where you are. You're married, you follow directions well. Nice to meet you, sir. You don't have a lot in your pockets. Anything down here? Hopefully so. Have a seat. There you go. You're doing well. Hi, sir, how are you? Good to see you, sir. You have a ring, a watch. Do you have a wallet on you? Joe: I don't. AR: Well, we'll find one for you. Come on up this way, Joe. Give Joe a round of applause. Come on up, Joe. Let's play a game. (Applause) AR: Pardon me. I don't think I need this clicker anymore. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. Come on up to the stage, Joe. Let's play a little game now. Anything in your front pockets? J: Money. AR: Money! All right, let's try that. Can you stand right over this way for me? Turn around and, let's see, if I give you something that belongs to me, this is just something I have, a poker chip. Hold out your hand for me. Watch it closely. This is a task for you to focus on. You have your money in your front pocket? J: Yup. AR: Good. I won't put my hand in your pocket. I'm not ready for that kind of commitment. Once a guy had a hole in his pocket, and that was rather traumatizing for me. I wanted his wallet, he gave me his number. Big miscommunication. (Laughter) Let's do this simply. Squeeze your hand tight. Do you feel the poker chip in your hand? J: I do. AR: Would you be surprised if I took it? Say yes. J: Very. AR: Good. Open your hand. Thank you very much. I'll cheat if you give me a chance. Make it harder for me. Just use your hand. Grab my wrist, but squeeze, squeeze firm. Did you see it go? Joe: No. AR: No, it's not here. Open your hand. While we're focused on the hand, it's sitting on your shoulder. Go ahead and take it off. Now, let's try that again. Hold your hand out flat. Open it up. Put your hand up a little bit higher, but watch it close. If I did it slowly, it'd be on your shoulder. (Laughter) Joe, we're going to keep doing this till you catch it. You'll get it eventually. I have faith in you. Squeeze firm. You're human, you're not slow. It's back on your shoulder. You were focused on your hand, distracted. While you were watching, I couldn't get your watch off. Yet you had something inside your pocket. Do you remember what it was? J: Money. AR: Check your pocket. Is it still there? (Laughter) Oh, there it was. Put it away. We're just shopping. This trick's more about the timing. I'm going to try to push it inside your hand. Put your other hand on top, would you? It's amazingly obvious now, isn't it? Looks a lot like the watch I was wearing, doesn't it? (Laughter) (Applause) J: That's pretty good. AR: Oh, thanks. (Applause) But it's only a start. Let's try it a little bit differently. Hold your hands together. Your other hand on top. If you're watching this little token, this obviously has become a little target, like a red herring. If we watch this kind of close, it looks like it goes away. It's not back on your shoulder. It falls out of the air, lands right back in the hand. Did you see it go? Yeah, funny. We've got a little guy. He's union, works up there all day. If I do it slowly it goes straight away, it lands by your pocket. Is it in this pocket, sir? Don't reach in your pocket. That's a different show. (Squeaking) That's rather strange. They have shots for that. Can I show them? Rather bizarre. Is this yours, sir? I have no idea how that works. We'll send that over there. I need help with this one. Step over this way for me. Don't run away. You had something down by your pants pocket. I was checking mine. I couldn't find everything, but I noticed you had something here. Can I feel the outside for a moment? Down here I noticed this. Is this something of yours, sir? I have no idea. That's a shrimp. J: Yeah. I'm saving it for later. AR: You've entertained all of these people in a wonderful way, better than you know. So we'd love to give you this lovely watch as a gift. (Laughter) Hopefully it matches his taste. We have a couple of other things, a little bit of cash. And we have a few other things, these all belong to you, along with a big round of applause from all your friends. (Applause) Joe, thank you very much. (Applause) (Applause ends) So, same question I asked you before, but this time you don't have to close your eyes. What am I wearing? Audience: Oh! (Laughter) (Hesitant applause) (Applause ends) Attention is a powerful thing. Like I said, it shapes your reality. So, I guess I'd like to pose that question to you. If you could control somebody's attention, what would you do with it? Thank you. (Applause)

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