About NeuroQuantology... It's no surprise that it's classified as such, since it posted papers related to quantum biology way before quantum biology was mildly accepted as it is now (especially in relation to the brain).
"Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to dream before..."
Here's a video of a presentation given by Marios Kittenis (with co-authors Bob Morris, Dick Bierman, Peter Caryl and Paul Stevens), entitled "Investigating EEG correlations between physically isolated participants." I'm not sure where or when it was given, but it's been made available by the SPR:
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• Max_B, Ninshub
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I must confess that I'd never found the time to look at Kittenis's thesis, to which I posted a link above.
It all seems a bit puzzling to me. That talk covers the first two experiments included in the thesis. The first, with white flashes, produced an apparently statistically significant result, for which in the "receiver" there was more activity just after the "sender" saw the randomly timed flash. In the second, with green flashes interspersed with fewer red flashes, produced a statistically significant result for the green, but not for the red. But this time there was more activity just before the flash than just after it - the effect was in the opposite direction.
The third study reported in the thesis essentially repeated the first, with a modified protocol and a larger number of subjects, but didn't produce a significant result. One modification that might conceivably have made a difference was that instead of having one "sender" and one "receiver," each of the participants was exposed to random flashes while the other was not, and the response of the other was analysed. To this layperson with no knowledge of EEG, that sounds as though it might produce more noise. But judging by Figure 4.10 in the thesis it doesn't seem to.
Another modification was that - because in the first two studies there was sometimes more activity before the flash and sometimes more after, in the third study the periods immediately before and after were added together for comparison with a longer composite control period extending further before and after. Obviously that would also affect the statistics, though I think more detailed analysis would be needed to work out how.
Kittenis suggests that the first two studies may just have been too small, and that they may have produced spurious results dominated by a few participants (because the population was inhomogeneous). Maybe a closer look at the thesis would shed some light on that possibility, but given the contradictory nature of the results it seems plausible.
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