National Security Students Learn the âMagicâ of Understanding Deception
An âIssues and Deceptionâ course taught at the Universityâs campus in Italy this semester by one of the worldâs experts in memory and deception explored the ins and outs of deception in a fun, unique, and hands-on way: by learning magic tricks.
December 6, 2022
By Renee Chmiel, Office of Marketing and Communications
Students in Dr. Morganâs âIssues and Deceptionâ class are learning magic tricks to help them better understand deception.
Liam Orsini â24 practices making several silver coins disappear one by one. Heâs learning how to perform the trick seamlessly while anticipating what his audience is thinking and feeling. Not only is mastering this trick fun, itâs an exercise in understanding deception.
Orsini is learning from one of the worldâs foremost experts in understanding deception and how the mind works. He recently returned from studying abroad at the Universityâs campus in Prato, Italy, where he took âIssues and Deceptionâ with Charles âAndyâ Morgan, M.D., M.A., a forensic psychiatrist, former intelligence officer, and neuroscientist. The trick was part of a class assignment, enabling Orsini and his classmates to study deception in a hands-on and novel way.
In working to master two magic tricks, students learned about the science of deception, including how it feels on a personal level. When performing a magic trick, which by its nature requires deception, students gain an understanding of the major components of being deceptive â anxiety and fear â known as a âcognitive load.â The magic tricks help students appreciate and șÚÁÏÉç these components in a fun and safe way.
âBy practicing this, improving our skills, and convincingly completing the trick, weâre utilizing what weâve learned in class,â said Orsini, who is pursuing a degree in national security. âThe trick is an example of deception. The purpose is to deceive the person observing it, and we talked about the different components of deception in class. Now weâre figuring out how they apply to the trick, and Iâm trying to determine if the person watching picks up on what Iâm doing.â
Dr. Morgan demonstrates one of the magic tricks the students learned
âMuch harder than people thinkâ
The class is a unique and hands-on way for students to learn about the science behind determining whether someone is lying, a skill directly transferrable to interviewing. Students have their own story they want to tell â that they are making the coins disappear â and the story they donât want to tell because theyâre hiding something. Like a suspect who is fabricating in, say, a police interrogation, the students performing the trick are saying one thing and doing another, and they have to convince their audience.
Dr. Morgan likes to find creative and fun ways to engage his students. While in Italy, he also taught âWorld of Spies and Espionage,â in which students explored the world of spying and espionage as it is represented in the world of feature films. While watching movies, they focus on the narrative. They questioned what the world depicted in these films would look like if it were real, as well as why individuals are betrayed and what the rules are. Films, says Dr. Morgan, can provide an invaluable insight into implicit meaning. He hopes this, as well as âIssues and Deception,â can help students apply what theyâve learned to the âreal world.
âThe reason deception can work, if youâre working at the or the or any of the other agencies, is that time, effort, and planning go into successful operations,â said Dr. Morgan, a national security professor at the University who spent much of the fall semester with students in Italy. âItâs not easy to be deceptive in a convincing way. Itâs actually much harder than people think.â
âItâs awesomeâ
While performing their magic tricks, students must manage executing the trick properly and convincing their audience while also handing the cognitive load of deception. Theyâre trying to tell a story while simultaneously hiding what theyâre really doing.
While Kalyssa Ward-Hill â24 insists she does not like lying, she says the class â and learning the magic tricks â has been eye-opening. âIssues and Deceptionâ was the first class she took with Dr. Morgan, and she enjoyed surprising her audience while performing the magic tricks.
âIt helps teach us about how people could say or do one thing but use disguises,â said Ward-Hill, an international affairs major. âItâs awesome. Dr. Morgan makes it fun. If you get it wrong, itâs not a big deal. Heâll teach you.â
Tom Woods â23 (left) and Liam Orsini â24 practice magic tricks during class.
âMimicking realityâ
Dr. Morgan wants to make sure his students master the tricks. They have time in class to practice, and at the end of the course, the students perform their tricks for their classmates, professor, and a panel of judges. They are scored on their technical and presentation abilities. The assignment teaches them that deception takes practice, something they come to understand and appreciate firsthand.
âSkill doesnât matter if you canât convince the person watching,â said Tom Woods â23, who is pursuing a national security degree. âThey have to believe it. They think the coin disappears. This is a perfect way to demonstrate what weâve learned instead of simply a classroom lecture.â
For Orsini, the member of the Universityâs national security program, the class was a great way to learn about deception firsthand while having fun learning magic tricks with his in classmates â all while studying abroad in Italy.
âItâs mimicking reality,â he said. âThe stakes are low, but still you want to do it convincingly.â
Dr. Morgan helps Emily Kelliher â24 perfect her magic trick.