http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/02/opinion/02dolnick.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

Fish or Foul?
By EDWARD DOLNICK
Published: September 2, 2008

WHEN news of the great fish fraud broke recently, New York's elite
restaurateurs rushed to defend their sushi. Phony labels on the red
snapper? Knock-off tuna? Not to worry. Top chefs can't be fooled, they
insisted, nor can their customers. "It is impossible to mislead people
who have knowledge," declared Eric Ripert, the chef at Le Bernardin.

Few statements could do more to gladden a con man's heart. In the art
of the con, magicians and swindlers and forgers insist, the ideal
victim is not an ignoramus but an expert. Any magician would rather
take on a roomful of physicists than of 5-year-olds. "When you're
certain you cannot be fooled," wrote the magician Teller, "you become
easy to fool."

Experts make the best victims because they jump to unwarranted
conclusions. The savvier they are, the quicker they jump, because they
see at a glance which way a story is heading. In 2002, for instance, a
French wine researcher named Frédéric Brochet gave 54 experts an array
of red wines to evaluate. Some of the glasses contained white wine
that Mr. Brochet had doctored to look red, by adding a tasteless,
odorless additive. Not a single taster noticed the switch.

"About 2 or 3 percent of people detect the white wine flavor," Mr.
Brochet said, "but invariably they have little experience of wine
culture. Connoisseurs tend to fail to do so. The more training they
have, the more mistakes they make because they are influenced by the
color of the wine."

For the experts, the term "red wine" carries countless associations.
Each one points to further questions; each question leads them further
off the trail. By contrast, the amateurs' ignorance keeps them from
exploring subtle byways. Seeing only one question — "what do you think
of this wine?" — they can't wander far.

The catch is that, when it comes to food, we all think of ourselves as
experts. But we taste with both our tongues and our minds, and it's
easy to lead minds astray. Brownies taste better, for example, when
served on china rather than on paper plates, research has shown. And
we prefer wine with a pedigree, even if it's a phony one. Sometimes
all it takes is an alluring name. Until a few decades ago, Patagonian
toothfish was a trash fish not worth trying to give away. Renamed
Chilean sea bass, it sold so fast that it nearly disappeared from the
sea.

Expectations are everything. In one recent test, psychologists asked
32 volunteers to sample strawberry yogurt. To make sure the testers
made their judgments purely on the basis of taste, the researchers
said, they needed to turn out the lights. Then they gave their
subjects chocolate yogurt. Nineteen of the 32 praised the strawberry
flavor. One said that strawberry was her favorite flavor and she
planned to switch to this new brand.

The volunteers knew the taste of strawberries perfectly well. That was
the problem. The associations that came with the word "strawberry"
overwhelmed the taste of chocolate. Every trickster's hope, says Jim
Steinmeyer, who designs illusions for magicians, is "finding smart
people who bring a lot to the table — cultural experience, shared
expectations, preconceptions. The more they bring, the more there is
to work with, and the easier it is to get the audience to make
allowances — to reach the 'right' conclusion and unwittingly
participate in the deception."

In the case of the fish forgery, discovered by a pair of high school
students armed with DNA tests, a nice presentation and a lofty price
tag probably helped restaurants palm off tilapia as white tuna. That
left diners poised for a fall. But in the end they weren't pushed.
They jumped. Maybe their own ignorance or carelessness did them in.
More likely it was overconfidence.

It's a culprit that's claimed countless victims. In a classic study
done in 1977, psychologists asked subjects an array of random
questions. What is the capital of Ecuador? In the United States do
more people die annually from suicide or homicide? After answering
each question, volunteers were asked to rate how sure they were that
their answer was correct.

Subjects hugely overestimated their own knowledge. Some not only gave
wrong answers, but also put the odds that they were wrong at one in
10,000 or even one in a million. In areas where the respondents were
more knowledgeable, they were more accurate but even more
overconfident.

It's natural to assume that these traps only snooker other people.
Don't count on it. The art curator and historian Theodore Rousseau, a
connoisseur of forgery, pointed out that we never find out about the
best scams. "We should all realize that we can only talk about the bad
forgeries, the ones that have been detected," Rousseau warned. "The
good ones are still hanging on the walls."

Or waiting at the sushi bar.

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