A preprint reporting a forced choice precognition study using an "immersive audiovisual environment to induce a psi-conducive state", comparing results with and without feedback, and looking at the effects of mental discipline/meditation, has been uploaded to ResearchGate:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication...n_Research
There were four pre-registered hypotheses, and the results were non-significant at 5% (though in the expected direction) for all of them.
The Selfield: Optimizing Precognition Research
Mario Varvoglis, Peter A. Bancel, Jean-Paul Bailly, Jocelyne Boban and Djohar si Ahmed
We report an exploratory forced-choice precognition study based on a protocol that utilized an immersive audiovisual environment to induce a psi-conducive state in participants. Our objective was to assess whether this optimization setup would help produce significant psi results with an unselected population. We also sought to assess whether trial-by-trial feedback would produce superior scoring to no-feedback trials. For each trial, participants selected an opaque graphical sphere that they felt contained a facial image (as opposed to being empty). After selection, the program randomly determined whether the sphere would be empty or not, and whether feedback should be shown. A preset total of 3000 binary choice trials were collected from 82 participants. Each participant contributed either 1 or 2 20-trial series, based on preset scoring criteria. The total hit rate of successful trials was 50.1%, close to expectation under the null hypothesis of no psi effect. Hit rates for feedback and no-feedback trials were in the predicted direction (51.0% vs. 48.6%). A post-hoc analysis showed that hit rates for feedback trials increased over the 20-trial series, suggesting that participants may have progressively found a mental strategy for improved scoring. Additionally, a subgroup of 26 experienced meditators had a hit rate of 52.1%, a result consistent with previous literature that suggests that meditators are particularly good participants for psi research.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication...n_Research
There were four pre-registered hypotheses, and the results were non-significant at 5% (though in the expected direction) for all of them.
The Selfield: Optimizing Precognition Research
Mario Varvoglis, Peter A. Bancel, Jean-Paul Bailly, Jocelyne Boban and Djohar si Ahmed
We report an exploratory forced-choice precognition study based on a protocol that utilized an immersive audiovisual environment to induce a psi-conducive state in participants. Our objective was to assess whether this optimization setup would help produce significant psi results with an unselected population. We also sought to assess whether trial-by-trial feedback would produce superior scoring to no-feedback trials. For each trial, participants selected an opaque graphical sphere that they felt contained a facial image (as opposed to being empty). After selection, the program randomly determined whether the sphere would be empty or not, and whether feedback should be shown. A preset total of 3000 binary choice trials were collected from 82 participants. Each participant contributed either 1 or 2 20-trial series, based on preset scoring criteria. The total hit rate of successful trials was 50.1%, close to expectation under the null hypothesis of no psi effect. Hit rates for feedback and no-feedback trials were in the predicted direction (51.0% vs. 48.6%). A post-hoc analysis showed that hit rates for feedback trials increased over the 20-trial series, suggesting that participants may have progressively found a mental strategy for improved scoring. Additionally, a subgroup of 26 experienced meditators had a hit rate of 52.1%, a result consistent with previous literature that suggests that meditators are particularly good participants for psi research.