• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Do Animals Fall For Magic Tricks? Watch A Devastated Squirrel Monkey Prove That Yes, They Do

December 4, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

It’s got to be a great day as a scientist when you’re called upon to perform magic tricks for monkeys. That’s what the authors of a 2023 study found themselves doing when they used “The French Drop” as a tool for studying an animal’s capacity to anticipate another’s actions.

“Magicians use intricate techniques to mislead the observer into experiencing the impossible,” said Dr Elias Garcia-Pelegrin, a magician and assistant professor in comparative psychology at the National University of Singapore, in a statement. “It is a great way to study blind spots in attention and perception.”

“By investigating how species of primates experience magic, we can understand more about the evolutionary roots of cognitive shortcomings that leave us exposed to the cunning of magicians.”

(FYI – Director of the UK’s only MAGIC Lab, Dr Gustav Kuhn, will be at our next CURIOUS Live event on December 11 if you have any questions about how magic can be wielded as a tool for science.)

Garcia-Pelegrin was completing his PhD at Cambridge University when his team began performing magic for three species of monkey: common marmosets (Callithrix jacchus), Humboldt’s squirrel monkeys (Saimiri cassiquiarensis), and yellow-breasted capuchins (Sapajus xanthosternos).

The French drop is a classic sleight-of-hand trick where a magician appears to take an object from one hand using the other. As the “grabbing” hand closes, the object is secretly left in the original hand, but the audience’s attention follows the empty hand, creating the illusion of disappearance. So, how did the monkeys get on?



The team performed the French drop for 24 monkeys, replacing the coin you’d typically use for a human audience with each species’ snack of choice. Eight capuchins were after peanuts, eight squirrel monkeys wanted dried mealworms, and eight marmosets were hungry for *checks notes* marshmallows. Fair play.

The differences between the monkeys and how often they fell for the trick were pretty extreme, pointing to a trait shared by the most gullible species.

The biggest suckers were the squirrel monkeys, who fell for the trick 93 percent of the time. Meanwhile, capuchins also lost out 81 percent of the time. The marmosets, however, were chowing down on marshmallows, having only been caught out by the trick 6 percent of the time.

So, what do squirrel monkeys and capuchins have that marmosets don’t? Human-like hands.

“There is increasing evidence that the same parts of the nervous system used when we perform an action are also activated when we watch that action performed by others,” explained Prof Nicola Clayton FRS, senior author of the study from Cambridge’s Department of Psychology. “This mirroring in our neural motor system might explain why the French drop worked for the capuchins and squirrel monkeys but not for marmosets.”

“It’s about the embodiment of knowledge. How one’s fingers and thumbs move helps to shape the way we think, and the assumptions we make about the world – as well as what others might see, remember and anticipate, based on their expectations.”

“Our work raises the intriguing possibility that an individual’s inherent physical capability heavily influences their perception, their memory of what they think they saw, and their ability to predict manual movements of those around them.”

The study is published in the journal Current Biology.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. U.S. trade office says GM Mexico labor case concluded, tariff threat lifted
  2. Underground Chamber Found At Leicester Cathedral Suggests Folktale May Be True
  3. The Gogottes Of The Fontainebleau Dunes Are Nature’s Weirdest Sculptures
  4. Please Don’t Waste Your Money On “Anti-EMF Amulets”, People

Source Link: Do Animals Fall For Magic Tricks? Watch A Devastated Squirrel Monkey Prove That Yes, They Do

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Do Animals Fall For Magic Tricks? Watch A Devastated Squirrel Monkey Prove That Yes, They Do
  • Google’s CEO Wants AI Data Centers In Space In 2027. There Is One Massive Problem
  • Live Seven-Arm Octopus Spotted In The Deep Sea – Only The Fourth Time It’s Been Seen In 40 Years
  • Uranus May Not Be So Weird After All – Voyager Just Caught It During An Unusual Gust Of Wind
  • “Exceptional” 5.5-Million-Light-Year-Long Cosmic Structure Appears To Be Rotating, Challenging Current Models Of The Universe
  • How A Mystery Volcano Sparked The Black Death In The 14th Century
  • A Strange New Species Of Bird Has Worrying Similarities To The Doomed Dodo
  • Darkest Fabric Ever Made – Inspired By Birds-Of-Paradise – Creates The Ultimate Little Black Dress
  • This Guy’s Head Was Bitten By A Lion 6,000 Years Ago – But He Survived
  • 12 Former FDA Heads Call Out FDA’s Leaked Memo Claiming COVID-19 Vaccines Killed Children In Bid To Change Policy
  • Hidden Features In Our Galaxy Discovered By Studying The Milky Way From The Inside Out
  • Why Does My Belly Button Smell?
  • 2,500-Year-Old Chronicle Is Oldest Known Record Of A Total Solar Eclipse And Reveals Some Surprises
  • RIP Claude: San Francisco’s Iconic Albino Alligator Dies Aged 30
  • Nitrous Oxide: Inhaling “Laughing Gas” Could Be Surprisingly Effective For Treating Severe Depression
  • JWST Discovers A Milky Way-Like Spiral Galaxy Where It Shouldn’t Exist
  • World’s Largest Dinosaur Tracksite Has At Least 16,600 Footprints And Sets Many World Records
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Will Make Its Closest Approach To Earth This Month, Just 270 Million Kilometers Away
  • How Does Time Pass On Mars? For The First Time, We Have A Precise Answer
  • Is This How The Voynich Manuscript Was Made? A New Cipher Offers Fascinating Clues
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version