Motherboard

  • All
  • Film + Video
  • Music
  • Art + Design
  • Gaming
  • Environment + The Body
  • Wonderful
  • Video Room
  • Open Collections
Technology and Philosophy The Future of Music Technology in Fashion The Future of Moving Pictures Our Joysticks, Our Consoles Do-It-Yourself Tech Beyond the Internet Space In the Lab Nature Technology and Love Myths and Weirdos Meme Culture Business and Politics Animals MB 2011 Mixtape Watch This Trailer View all

Welcome to Motherboard

Collapse

Motherboard is a celebration of the diversity and eclecticism of the culture that surrounds technology. Rather than squinting at technology through the lens of gizmos and gadgetry, Motherboard explores the ways it influences and affects music, art, design, film, gaming, sports, issues surrounding the environment, and everything else we find important.

So consider the floor open for group participation. It's simple: Get involved in an existing discussion, post your own related videos, write posts, comment, anything… you're now part of the Motherboard.

Learn more about Motherboard

New to Motherboard?

Then let us get you situated! Before you know it, you’ll be:

  • Writing, editing, and posting all your wildest technological musings
  • Commenting on stories and helping to push the conversation forward
  • Creating a personalized page and chatting with other users
  • And a whole lot more…
  • Join now
  • Login

A Visit With Daryl Bem, Who Found Precognition In the Men Who Stare at Porn

Posted by Robert_Hovden on Friday, Jan 07, 2011

  • Save this post
  • Precognition-eye-daryl-bem_large
  • Next
  • Prev
Share Retweet
Add This

You may not have met Dr. Daryl Bem yet, but if his findings are true, you may already feel his presence. The energetic emeritus Cornell parapsychologist has attempted to experimentally demonstrate that the human mind can “feel” future events. And in his latest article, he reports that people in the present are probably influenced by, and can predict, events that happen in the future.

At the very least, his research says, we are able to predict pornography. Really. But more on that in a moment.

Before you confuse Bem’s research with past parapsychology hoaxes such as Project Alpha, or the experiments in “The Men Who Stare at Goats,” keep in mind that the article (pdf) is set to appear this month in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, one of the field’s premier clearinghouses. “The article has passed review by four scientific experts,” Bem says.

His experiments test for precognition—the ability of people to perceive events in the future. In one of nine such experiments conducted on more than 1000 student subjects, a pornographic image would randomly appear on the left or right hand side of a computer screen. The results indicate that people could predict where the pornographic image would appear—even before the computer made its random decision.

Of course, this phenomenon was not observed to occur all of the time. Instead, Bem looks for the small deviations in expected outcomes. In this case, it is expected that people would, on average, guess the left or right side correctly 50% of the time. However, he reports that his participants could predict the position 53.1% of the time. And because this 3.1% difference is reported statistically significant, Bem asserts it is strong evidence for precognition. This, as well as the results of his other experiments, undoubtedly appears extraordinary.

CONTROVERSY IS ALSO PREDICTABLE

Of course, as Bem himself anticipated, the approval of his paper for publication has reopened some vigorous debate around psi, the field of psychology related to what he calls the “anomalous process of information or energy transfer.” Not long after a preprint of his paper surfaced, Bem began fielding criticism from a slew of critiques, including an in-depth review by “James Alcock”, an established parapsychology critic. Most notably, critiques are coming from statisticians who request more advanced Bayesian analysis (See this paper and this paper). However, their criticism extends further than Bem. As Eric-Jan Wagenmakers states, “[Bem’s results] indicate that experimental psychologists need to change the way they conduct their experiments and analyze their data.”

But by basing his tests and statistical analysis on known and standard methods, Bem keeps them intentionally simple and repeatable, which he believes has made his results more convincing. He says he’s received many requests for the materials he used so that more studies can be conducted. Although he supports accurate replication of his work, he notes a concern for the decline effect – the tendency of effects in scientific research to decline over time. It’s an effect for which the parapsychology field is famous.

Two social psychologists who replicated Bem’s pornography experiment, Leif Nelson of the University of California at Berkeley and Jeff Galak of Carnegie Mellon University, found no significant results. But this is empirical science, and their findings don’t completely rule out Bem’s:

“There are obviously a multitude of possibilities for why we failed to obtain a result similar to Bem, ranging from the mundane (e.g., our sample was more heterogeneous than Bem’s) to the exotic (e.g., the quantum mechanics that allow for the detection of future events are also contingent on the specific physical features of the original experiment rooms.)

… For the purposes of this paper we really only care about one possibility: Do we fail to detect precognition because precognition does not exist? In answer to this question we emphatically say, ‘We don’t know. On the one hand, we fail to replicate the effect, but on the other hand, our single failure to replicate is hardly sufficient to seriously undermine an entire paper.’”

For enthusiasts of precognition, the paper is already a milestone. Although the psi world may in large part be comprised of spiritual or supernatural beliefs, Dr. Bem told me he “belongs to a different camp.” His fascination with physics and mathematics led him to strive for physical explanations of precognitive phenomena. His research is not driven by religion or spirituality but rather a spirited curiosity, he says.

WHY AND HOW

While Bem can offer no explanations for the phenomena he found, he points to analogies in the field of physics to provide some hope for an explanation that we may later understand. Bem gives the example of bird migration, which was once thought to be a psi phenomena. Now it’s understood that it’s contingent on birds’ perception of the earth’s magnetic fields.

As for why certain individuals may be endowed with precognitive abilities – he doesn’t think we’re all the same – Bem underscored the evolutionary drive. In the wild, there are very obvious advantages to predicting shocking events a couple seconds before. Animals being hunted could rely on a precognitive instinct to detect danger before it strikes. That kind of competitive edge has a positive effect on the “fitness” of an individual; Bem posits that by natural selection, precognitive abilities have grown in animals.

The best underlying explanation is harder to grasp, Bem states, because it may lie in quantum mechanics. “Even if quantum-based theories eventually mature from metaphor to genuine models of psi,” he said, “they are still unlikely to provide intuitively satisfying mechanisms for psi because quantum theory fails to provide intuitively satisfying mechanisms for physical reality itself.”

At the end of his paper, Dr. Bem quotes legendary physicist Richard Feynman, and he did so again during our discussion. The quote comes from a candid discussion by Feynman on quantum mechanics: “The difficulty really is psychological and exists in the perpetual torment that results from your saying to yourself, ‘But how can it be like that?’”

The quote would seem like an ironic choice, given that Feynman was an outspoken critic of parapsychology during his own years at Cornell. “Although you may gain some temporary fame and excitement,” Feynman states, “you will not gain a good reputation as a scientist if you haven’t tried to be very careful in this kind of work.”

But what appears to make Professor Bem a more important kind of parapsychologist is the higher level of care he took in his controversial endeavor. Whether he will convince the world of the existence of psi in the future, that can’t be predicted just yet.

Daryl Bem’s homepage

Related
Greatest Science Controversies of the Year
Psychic Octopus Cares Little About Silly Human Games
Evolutionary Tactics

PHOTO: Flickr / camknows
  • Rating:
  • rate 1
  • rate 2
  • rate 3
  • rate 4
  • rate 5
  • (14 ratings)3

Filed under:

  • Technology and Philosophy
  • In the Lab
  • Myths and Weirdos
  • Environment + The Body
  • Wonderful

  • Send to a friend
  • Save this post

RSS

About the author

Hovden_profile_medium

Robert_Hovden

R. Hovden
Ithaca, United States
Member since 2011

  • More on Robert_Hovden
  • View all Robert_Hovden's posts

Conversation Leaders

  • Profile2_theme_leader
  • Alec1_theme_leader
  • _mg_2752_theme_leader
  • Alex-pasternack_theme_leader
  • Headshot_theme_leader
  • Macface_theme_leader
  • Photo-4_theme_leader
  • 198144_10100444937463675_12400637_62766012_6835874_n_theme_leader

In the Discussions:

  • Technology and Philosophy
  • In the Lab
  • Myths and Weirdos
View all

Related Posts

  • Australia-scanning_sidebar Face Scanning for Terror
  • Osimpson_sidebar Scientists Find Moral Compass, Then Scramble It With Magnets
  • Lie-detector-steroids_sidebar (video) The Truth About the NSA's "The Truth About the Polygraph" (Aldrich Ames Agrees)

Blog Roll

  • Alt.Engadget
  • This Recording
  • BLDGBLOG
  • Matrixsynth
  • Mudd Up!
  • IEEE Spectrum
  • Thought Catalog
  • Devour
  • Babbage
  • Cyberology
  • Technosociology
  • Rhizome
  • Creators Project
  • VICE
  • Smithsonian
  • Atlantic Tech
  • Death and Taxes
  • BBC Horizon

Related posts

  • Face Scanning for Terror

    Continuing in their mission to become Oceania incarnate, the Australian government has decided to...

    Feb 24, 2010
    by Alex_Dunbar
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Scientists Find Moral Compass, Then Scramble It With Magnets

    Researchers at MIT have found that magnets can alter a person’s sense of morality. Using a ...

    Mar 30, 2010
    by James_Knutila
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • (video)

    The Truth About the NSA's "The Truth About the Polygraph"

    To quell the concerns of job applicants, the NSA has produced a public relations video and pamphl... (video)

    Jun 14, 2010
    by Sam_Gellman
    • Save this post
    • Watch and discuss
  • Hypothetical Doomsday End of World Scenarios

    Whether or not you believe that modern humanity is doomed to destroy itself or if you’re st...

    Jan 11, 2010
    by Matthew_Stern
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • The Post-Avatar Blues

    Some people are apparently getting waaay too into that new Terminator in space movie. While James...

    Jan 14, 2010
    by pizza_dogs
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Was the Google China Hack An Inside Job?

    Not long after Googlegate broke on Tuesday, a rumor popped up on Wikileaks: “Gossip from wi...

    Jan 14, 2010
    by Alex_Pasternack
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • Q+A: Ragbir Bhathal, Australia's Leading Alien Hunter

    Just about a year ago Ragbir Bhathal was scanning the night sky for alien activity, just as he do...

    Jan 29, 2010
    by Motherboard
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
  • (video)

    Iran Increases Use of Uranium, Decreases Use of Internet

    On the same day that Iran achieved 20 percent enriched Uranium — the first big step toward ... (video)

    Feb 11, 2010
    by Redalurk
    • Save this post
    • Watch and discuss
  • (video)

    Snowmageddon Climate Science: Yes, Snow, Maybe

    The only thing more tiring than “snowmaggedon” are the claims that it means global wa... (video)

    Feb 11, 2010
    by Alex_Pasternack
    • Save this post
    • Watch and discuss
  • Body Scannin: Totally Workin'!

    Not long ago, everyone was flipping their sh*t about airports using full body scanners. They migh...

    Feb 12, 2010
    by pizza_dogs
    • Save this post
    • Read and discuss
    • Most Popular
    • Very Popular
    • Popular
    • Popular this Week
    • Most Recent
View more related

Motherboard loading...

End of transmission.

Welcome to Motherboard Explore How To More
Motherboard is a celebration of the diversity and eclecticism of the culture that surrounds technology. So consider the floor open for group participation.
  • All
  • Film + Video
  • Music
  • Art + Design
  • Gaming
  • Environment + The Body
  • Wonderful
  • Sorting content
  • Saving posts
  • What is a collection
  • How to become a leader
  • Posting content
  • Newsletter
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Vice
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Join Motherboard Watch Videos Here! Help About Motherboard
  • Subscribe to the RSS feed RSS © 2010 Vice All Rights Reserved
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site by AREA 17
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Subscribe to the RSS feed
  • Newsletter
  • Hey stranger
  • Join now
  • About MB
  • Login
  • Search Motherboard