New meta-analysis of dream-ESP studies

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Apart from not being able to make head or tail of that particular distinction, I'm afraid I don't find this paper in general very clear or useful.

They seem to think that because they don't find a difference to be statistically significant, they can conclude that there is no difference. For example, they explicitly conclude that dream ESP is independent of laboratory [notably Maimonides versus non-Maimonides], REM monitoring, target type (static or dynamic) and "perhaps" the number of choices in the judging set.

But of course, the lack of statistical significance may just be because the numbers aren't big enough. The fact is that the effect size in the Maimonides studies is well over twice the size of the effect size in the non-Maimonides studies, and when the statistics are analysed in terms of effect size, the p value is 0.055 (two-tailed). Similarly, the effect size for dynamic targets is twice that for static targets, and the p value is 0.068 (one-tailed). Studies with REM monitoring have an effect size 50% bigger than those without. Of course, those values aren't sufficient to conclude definitely that there's a difference. But that doesn't mean it can be concluded that there isn't a difference! They suggest quite strongly that there is.

It doesn't help that as well as testing whether effect sizes were different in different groups, they test whether Z values were different. But seeing that the Z value depends on the study size, and the average study sizes vary between the groups they're comparing, I can't see that that tells them anything useful.

They don't appear to do a comparison between selected and unselected subjects. (Except for the "single subject" versus "multiple perceiver" comparison, which is meant to be something to do with "star subjects". But presumably some of the studies with more than one participant were selective. And perhaps some of the single-participant studies were non-selective?)

It seems to me there most probably is an important difference between the Maimonides and non-Maimonides studies. In the conclusion, they say that two of the authors, Sherwood and Roe (2013), previously concluded that there was such a difference, and attributed it to considerations of procedure rather than quality. But they also say that according to their ratings the Maimonides studies were worse in quality than the non-Maimonides ones (and they want to conclude that most of the procedural differences are unimportant). Whether the previous interpretation is true, or whether the one suggested by this paper is true, strikes me as the single most important issue in relation to these dream studies, but this paper doesn't address it directly at all.
(2017-11-28, 07:55 PM)Chris Wrote: I don't know whether anyone has actually tried to read this paper, but if anyone has ...

Can someone explain what the authors mean by:
(i) Same perceiver studies versus different perceiver studies,
(ii) Single perceiver studies versus multiple perceiver studies and
(iii) Single subject (i.e. 1 percipient) studies versus multiple perceiver studies?

Apparently these are meant to be three different distinctions. I understand what the third means, but not the first two. I keep hoping the authors will explain themselves, but I've just read the relevant part of the results section, and I'm still in the dark.

Well, I didn't read the paper, however
Quote:(i) Same perceiver studies versus different perceiver studies,
sounds like either testing the same person multiple times versus testing multiple people just once - or something along those lines.

That sounds somewhat similar to the third one. I think the difference is that 'multiple perceiver' means more than one person is simultaneously participating in the same task.

And yes, I should really have read the paper before commenting. Sorry about that.
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(2017-11-28, 07:55 PM)Chris Wrote: I don't know whether anyone has actually tried to read this paper, but if anyone has ...

Can someone explain what the authors mean by:
(i) Same perceiver studies versus different perceiver studies,
(ii) Single perceiver studies versus multiple perceiver studies and
(iii) Single subject (i.e. 1 percipient) studies versus multiple perceiver studies?

Apparently these are meant to be three different distinctions. I understand what the third means, but not the first two. I keep hoping the authors will explain themselves, but I've just read the relevant part of the results section, and I'm still in the dark.

From looking at the papers the authors referenced as examples, this is my guess. The categories are not mutually exclusive. Sometimes multiple people were involved in the same trial and their results were either considered individually, or they were pooled into a single result.

Same perceivers across dream trials means that multiple trials were performed by the same people (singly or as a group), each treated as a separate trial (Dalton). This excludes Foulkes (only one trial was run per person) and Kathmani (while 2 trials were run per person, they were treated as a single unit).

Single perceiver studies mean there was only one perceiver per trial. This excludes Dalton in which several people contributed (through consensus) to each trial.

A study can fit into more than one category. For example, a study of a single star subject would fit into all three (same perceiver for multiple separate trials, single perceiver per trial, star perceiver).

Linda
Thanks for your suggestions. Maybe the best thing about this is that the differences in effect size are so small in each case, so whatever distinctions exactly they are looking at, they don't seem to be practically important.

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