The research was led by Samuel Moulton, a graduate student in the department of psychology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University with Stephen Kosslyn, John Lindsley Professor of Psychology at Harvard and was published in the Jan. 2008 issue of the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. The scientists used brain scanning to test whether individuals have knowledge that cannot be explained through normal perceptual processing.
"If any ESP processes exist, then participants' brains should respond differently to ESP and non-ESP stimuli," explains Moulton. “Instead, results showed that participants’ brains responded identically to ESP and non-ESP stimuli, despite reacting strongly to differences in how emotional the stimuli were and showing subtle, stimulus-related effects.”
Nearly half of the adults in the United States believe in the existence of ESP, which includes telepathy (direct knowledge of another person's thoughts), clairvoyance (direct knowledge of remote events), and precognition (direct knowledge of the future). People commonly report unexplained knowledge of a loved one's death or a telephone caller's identity, for example, and attribute this knowledge to paranormal mental processing.
The U.S. government lent credence to such claims when it revealed that it had spent millions of dollars recruiting and training psychic spies during the Cold War. Furthermore, research studies have been reported that appear to support the existence of ESP, including an influential series of experiments analyzed by psychologist Daryl Bem of Cornell University. These studies, however, gave little insight into the mechanisms -- normal or paranormal -- that produced the anomalous results. Perhaps more telling, others failed to replicate these results.
To develop a better test of ESP, the authors decided to develop a new method, which directly addressed the presumed source of ESP: namely, the brain. They argue that because the brain enables perception and stores information -- even events people don't consciously perceive or information they can't consciously remember -- it can offer a much more comprehensive test for ESP than self-report or behavior.
"The brain shows a suppressed response to stimuli that a person has seen before, even when those stimuli were presented subliminally, so the person wasn't consciously aware of having seen them; furthermore, it shows an enhanced response to stimuli that a person is expecting," says Moulton. "Because knowledge and expectation bias brain activation, neuroimaging offers us a uniquely powerful test of subtle perceptual or cognitive processes."
To study whether or not ESP exists, Moulton and Kosslyn presented participants with two types of visual stimuli: ESP stimuli and non-ESP stimuli. These two types of stimuli were identical with one exception: ESP stimuli were not only presented visually, but also were presented telepathically, clairvoyantly, and precognitively to participants.
To present stimuli telepathically, the researchers showed the photographs to the participants' identical twin, relative, romantic partner, or friend, who was seated in another room. To present stimuli clairvoyantly, the researchers displayed the photographs on a distant computer screen. And to present stimuli precognitively, the researchers showed participants the photographs again in the future.
Does this conclusively prove that ESP does not exist" "No," says Moulton. "You cannot affirm the null hypothesis. But at the same time, some null results are stronger than others. This is the best evidence to date against the existence of ESP. Perhaps most important, this study offers scientists a new way to study ESP that avoids the pitfalls of past approaches."
This research was supported by the Bial Foundation and the Richard Hodgson Memorial Fund.
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Even the idea that animals possess these abilities is unsubstantiated, because we're so prone to recognizing coincidences, it's difficult to assess how such data would be transmitted.
It's not a question of having an open mind, it's a question of whether there is any evidence to suggest that some people have some intrinsic advantage by having access to information that isn't available to anyone else. I have never seen anything that suggests such a thing and while I can't claim to have witnessed every possible circumstance, I think that the general rule at this point is skepticism rather than embracing unsubstantiated claims.
Your point about looking in the wrong place, or not the right circumstances begs the question. If there is something there, then it must manifest in some fashion. If there is nothing different or unique about the brain activities then, the only reasonable conclusion is that nothing has taken place.
our thoughts form the world
and if just one more than half the people in the world believe in their idea then that is reality by majority verdict science proves that esp does exist because scientists are part of the "i dont believe in it" control group, science is about "esp" in a way and these "scientists" are out to prove instinct and intuition and the more ethereal aspects of the human character dont exist, they are there own proof of idiocy, theres something divine and otherworldly about the big movements in their own discipline- an intangible beauty in e=mc2 and if more than half of them agree with this then ive proven the existence of esp",hey heres an idea mr "science" and i use the term loosely here, maybe you cant prove the unprovable or disprove people who believe in something esoteric. to try to answer something like this using a brain scanner is a waste of this sad unfeeling humans time not to mention all the folk with the brain tumours cos they couldnt get a scan.
some scientists are cracked thats all this proves.
heres tomorrows headline
SCIENTISTS PROVE THAT THERE IS NO SOUL
if we let them carry on feeding us this crap they may well be right!
wankers.
oh im off to look for a wooden stick using a metal detector later anyone want to join me when we dont find it we can prove it didnt exist! thatll make sense.
i love science but these medical fuckwits are crazy,
Related science was discussed in Gerhard's series on free will and determinism.
http://www.scientificblogging.com/gerhard_adam/considering_free_will_ind...
http://www.scientificblogging.com/gerhard_adam/considering_free_will_rol...
http://www.scientificblogging.com/gerhard_adam/considering_free_will_mor...
The inescapable facts are that our brains produce radio waves of length about equal to the distance between our ears (micro waves), and those waves go every where in space with a very small intensity. Also inescapable is the fact that brain waves from other people are continually passing through our brains and interacting with our thoughts. All of these things can be measured.
Scientific research into the brain wave interactions and interferences first came to my attention more than 20 years ago. Cray super computers were used with 200 germanium processors running 30 gigahertz on faint signals from super cooled phased array antennas, to measure and map brain waves and reactions to brain waves.
I don't know how far that research progressed, but the research center that was doing the work now offers a commercial line of products from it's Department Of Human Behavior Modification.
There is a sport of sharing brain waves (privately with close friends) using commercial hardware and software for recreational use, and a religion of sharing brain waves with software that does not require additional hardware.
The conclusion I got from the earlier research program, was that our brain waves are unique to the shapes of the convolutes in our brains, and everyone has a different geometry. So for the most part our brains automatically ignore the interference. Also our brains operate at a lower efficiency when there is interference, but they automatically compensate by changing frequencies.
The fact that a brain is being monitored causes it to operate differently.
When there are no clear microwave channels available, the non essential parts of our thinking shuts down, leaving the resources to concentrate on essential items. Our essential thoughts appear to be more firmly established in biology and electro chemistry, and less susceptible to radio interference.
By comparison the recent results from Harvard appear to be far behind the times, in the design of experiments, and the assumptions upon which they depend.
Now everyone should realize that we continually cope with a lot of input from Extra Sensory sources, and our response to it is a normal brain function that every one uses routinely, without thinking about it.
The quantum mechanical effect from a Sum Of Paths calculation predicts a low level of continual Extra Sensory input from past and future events. Our brains ignore all of this by averaging a number of cycles where the quantum effects cancel out.
There is a well established conventional science to explain ESP in theory, and some experimental evidence for and against a physical significance. The recent Harvard report doesn't really add any thing useful to the discussion, because it depended on a wrong assumption.
A marketing manager asked the technical staff for advice in the place I was working. The scientific response was that the metal hat would act as an antennae unless it was grounded.
If the hat was grounded it would act as a lightning rod.
Marketing decided not to invest. in metal hats.







