![]() 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. Perhaps more telling, others failed to replicate these results. These studies, however, gave little insight into the mechanisms - normal or paranormal - that produced the anomalous results. 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. ![]() 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. 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. 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). “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.” ![]() “If any ESP processes exist, then participants’ brains should respond differently to ESP and non-ESP stimuli,” explains Moulton. The scientists used brain scanning to test whether individuals have knowledge that cannot be explained through normal perceptual processing. 2008 issue of the Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience. 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. Obtained against the existence of extrasensory perception, or ESP. According to the authors, their study not only illustrates a new method for studying such phenomena, but also provides the strongest evidence yet Psychologists at Harvard University have developed a new method to study extrasensory perception that, they argue, can resolve the century-old debate over its existence.
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