I was somewhat surprised to see the SPR retweet this:
https://bigthink.com/surprising-science/...belltitem1
I'm well-aware that this BigThink company have been and still are very biased against anything even remotely religious, spiritual or paranormal (they have done 'interviews' with Dawkins, Nye, Randi among others), but I noticed in the link to the original study that Dean Radin was involved.
(This post was last modified: 2021-01-08, 01:26 PM by OmniVersalNexus.)
https://bigthink.com/surprising-science/...belltitem1
Quote:The research team behind this study, led by brain researcher Arnaud Delorme, has previously analyzed brain activity, skin conductance, respiration, heart rate, and peripheral blood flow of self-professed mediums. During one 2013 study, four mediums produced results above chance. Seeking a neural correlate to psychic powers, they write,The full paper can be found here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar...2620302414
"One medium showed a decrease in EEG frontal midline theta waves during accurate responses, suggesting a possible decrease in executive functions associated with successful responses. A limitation of that experiment was its low statistical power due to the relatively small number of participants and number of trials."
...A follow-up study was conducted in 2018. The researchers wanted to know if mediums could identify whether a person was alive or dead based on photographs. After looking over 404 photographs, five of a dozen mediums performed better than chance. As there was no control group, however, the team had to keep testing.
For this study, a dozen professional mediums and a dozen volunteers were recruited. Every photograph was of a deceased individual. This time the task was to identify whether the person died of a heart attack, a car accident, or from being shot. Each image was cropped in such a manner so that you couldn't easily recognize the cause of death. While giving answers, every volunteer was scanned for changes in neural blood flow and heart rate. The results surprised the team:
"Overall, participants were able to detect the cause of death of deceased individuals at statistically robust above-chance levels. Contrary to our expectations that mediums would perform better than controls, the controls performed significantly better than the mediums."
While there were different neural responses between controls and self-professed mediums, they didn't correlate to correct answers.
I'm well-aware that this BigThink company have been and still are very biased against anything even remotely religious, spiritual or paranormal (they have done 'interviews' with Dawkins, Nye, Randi among others), but I noticed in the link to the original study that Dean Radin was involved.