Stephen Macknik | |
Birth Date: | August 9, 1968 |
Birth Name: | Stephen Louis Macknik |
Birth Place: | Dayton, Ohio |
Nationality: | American |
Field: | Neuroscience, science writing |
Work Institution: | Harvard University, University College London, Barrow Neurological Institute, State University of New York |
Alma Mater: | Harvard University |
Doctoral Advisor: | Margaret Livingstone |
Known For: | Illusions, art and visual perception, attention and awareness, Books: Sleights of Mind |
Awards: | Empire Innovator Scholar |
Stephen Louis Macknik (;[1] born August 9, 1968) is an American neuroscientist and science writer. He is a Professor of Ophthalmology, Neurology, and Physiology & Pharmacology[2] at the State University of New York, Downstate Medical Center, where he directs the Laboratory of Translational Neuroscience. He directed laboratories previously at the Barrow Neurological Institute and University College London. He is best known for his studies[3] on illusions, consciousness, attentional misdirection in stage magic, and cerebral blood flow.
Macknik is a founding member of the Neural Correlate Society.[4] He serves on the Advisory Board of Scientific American: Mind, and on the Leadership Team of the Center for Emergency Management and Homeland Security at Arizona State University.
Stephen Macknik was born in 1968 in Dayton, Ohio, to an astrophysicist father and physical therapist mother. He grew up in Maui, Hawaii. Macknik completed a triple-major in Psychobiology, Biology, and Psychology at the University of California, Santa Cruz in 1991. Thereafter, he completed his PhD in Neurobiology at Harvard University in 1996,[5] under the supervision of Prof. Margaret Livingstone. He received his postdoctoral training from the Nobel Laureate Prof. David Hubel at Harvard Medical School,[6] from 1996 to 2001.
In 2001, Macknik moved to the United Kingdom, as a Lecturer in Ophthalmology and laboratory director at University College London. In 2004, he returned to the United States as an Assistant Professor, and later, Associate Professor, at the Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix, Arizona, where he directed the Laboratory of Behavioral Neurophysiology. In 2014, he moved to Brooklyn, NY, as Professor of Ophthalmology, Neurology, and Physiology & Pharmacology at SUNY Downstate Medical Center,[7] where he directs the Laboratory of Translational Neuroscience. He serves on the editorial board of the scientific journal PeerJ.[8]
Macknik has received a number of awards, honoring his scientific work and his neuroscience outreach to the general public. Some of his awards include:
Macknik's research has been featured in print in The New York Times,[12] The New Yorker,[13] The Wall Street Journal,[14] [15] The Atlantic,[16] Wired, The LA Chronicle, The Times (London), The Chicago Tribune,[17] The Boston Globe,[18] Der Spiegel, etc., and in radio and TV shows, including Discovery Channel's Head Games and Daily Planet shows, NOVA: scienceNow,[19] CBS Sunday Morning,[20] NPR's Science Friday,[21] and PRI's The World.[22]
Macknik is married to fellow neuroscientist and frequent collaborator Susana Martinez-Conde,[23] who is also a professor and laboratory director at SUNY Downstate Medical Center. They have three children and live in Brooklyn, New York.
Macknik’s research focuses on the neural bases of perceptual and cognitive illusions.[24] He has studied visual masking illusions, the wakes and spokes illusion, and various illusions in stage magic. He writes the Illusions column for Scientific American: Mind.
Macknik studies the neural bases of attention and visual awareness.[25] His research on visual awareness has concentrated on visual masking, and attentional misdirection in stage magic.
Macknik and Martinez-Conde have pioneered the study of stage magic techniques from a neuroscience perspective. They have proposed that neuroscientists and magicians share many overlapping interests, and that both disciplines should collaborate with one another to mutual advantage. Macknik and Martinez-Conde are credited with founding the discipline of Neuromagic[26] as an area of scientific study devoted to unveiling the neural mechanisms underlying the perception of magic. Martinez-Conde and Macknik coined the term "Neuromagic" in a 2008 Scientific American article.[27] They have conducted research in collaboration with many renowned magicians, including Teller from Penn & Teller, Mac King, James Randi, and Apollo Robbins. Macknik and Martinez-Conde’s neuromagic research is the focus of their award-winning book and international bestseller Sleights of Mind.
Macknik's book Sleights of Mind,[28] co-written with Susana Martinez-Conde and Sandra Blakeslee, is an international bestseller published in 19 languages. In the New York Times Sunday Book Review, J.J. Abrams described Sleights of Mind as one of his favorite books and "a very cool read."[29] Sleights of Mind was listed as one of the 36 Best Books of the year by The Evening Standard, London, and received the Prisma Prize to the Best Science Book of the year.
Macknik and Martinez-Conde's 2017 book, Champions of Illusion,[30] [31] will be published by Scientific American/Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
Macknik and Martinez-Conde write a regular column for Scientific American: MIND[32] on the neuroscience and perception of illusions. Their collected articles were published in two Scientific American special issues, in 2010 and 2013.
Macknik and Martinez-Conde write the Illusion Chasers[33] blog, on "Illusions, Delusions, and Everyday Deceptions,"[33] for the Scientific American Blog Network.
Macknik has written for The Times, Odyssey, Muse,[34] and Scientific American.[35]