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This experiment, published in 1999 by Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons, is a striking demonstration of the zero-sum nature of attention.
In "The Invisible Gorilla," Simons and Christopher Chabris explain that such failures are called "change blindness": "People are 'blind' to the changes between what was in view moments before and ...
When they taught together at Harvard in the late 1990s, psychologist Daniel Simons and his student Christopher Chabris got an idea for a new experiment testing how the brain processes visual ...
Simons and Christopher Chabris of Union College wrote a book, " The Invisible Gorilla," on our limited capacity to handle distractions. 'The Invisible Gorilla:' How Many Distractions Can You Handle?
What started out as a class project became cognitive psychologists Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons' path to the 2004 Ig Nobel prize for sheddling light on "things that make you laugh and ...
Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons, read by Dan Woren, Random House Audio, unabridged, eight CDs, 9.5 hours, $35 ISBN 978-0-3077-3575-1 Chabris and Simons provide an eye-opening exploration of ...
The invisible gorilla experiment. Photos provided by Daniel Simons. Photo illustration by Diana Yates.
The award-winning study on this topic by Simons and Chabris (1999) led to a best-selling book called The Invisible Gorilla: How Our Intuitions Deceive Us (Chabris and Simons, 2009).
When asked if they had seen “The Invisible Gorilla” video, a majority of hands shot up at last night’s visual perception lecture given by Daniel Simons, current head of the Visual Cognition Laboratory ...
Christopher Chabris and Daniel Simons, Crown, $27 (320p) ISBN 9780307459657 Professors of Psychology Chabris and Simons write about six everyday illusions of perception and thought, including the ...
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