Electrocortical activity associated with subjective communication with the deceased
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Plain English Summary
Can mediums really talk to the dead? This groundbreaking study -- the first combining EEG brain recordings with double-blind accuracy testing -- investigated. Six certified mediums received only a deceased person's first name and answered 25 questions while brain activity was recorded. Startlingly, three of four scored above chance, with one achieving a jaw-dropping 46.8% accuracy advantage. Brain data offered an intriguing clue: one medium showed a link between frontal theta waves (slow rhythms tied to deep focus) and accuracy -- as theta decreased, accuracy went up. A tantalizing hint at a neural signature of the "receptive" state mediums describe, though appearing in just one medium, it shouldn't be overinterpreted. A second experiment found all six mediums' brains differed across four mental states -- communicating, recalling, perceiving, and fabricating -- though some effects might reflect muscle artifacts.
Actual Paper Abstract
During advanced meditative practices, unusual perceptions can arise including the sense of receiving information about unknown people who are deceased. As with meditation, this mental state of communication with the deceased involves calming mental chatter and becoming receptive to subtle feelings and sensations. Psychometric and brain electrophysiology data were collected from six individuals who had previously reported accurate information about deceased individuals under double-blind conditions. Each experimental participant performed two tasks with eyes closed. In the first task, the participant was given only the first name of a deceased person and asked 25 questions. After each question, the participant was asked to silently perceive information relevant to the question for 20 s and then respond verbally. Responses were transcribed and then scored for accuracy by individuals who knew the deceased persons. Of the four mediums whose accuracy could be evaluated, three scored significantly above chance (p < 0.03). The correlation between accuracy and brain activity during the 20 s of silent mediumship communication was significant in frontal theta for one participant (p < 0.01). In the second task, participants were asked to experience four mental states for 1 min each: (1) thinking about a known living person, (2) listening to a biography, (3) thinking about an imaginary person, and (4) interacting mentally with a known deceased person. Each mental state was repeated three times. Statistically significant differences at p < 0.01 after correction for multiple comparisons in electrocortical activity among the four conditions were obtained in all six participants, primarily in the gamma band (which might be due to muscular activity). These differences suggest that the impression of communicating with the deceased may be a distinct mental state distinct from ordinary thinking or imagination.
Research Notes
First published EEG study of mediumship accuracy under double-blind conditions. Extends Beischel's Windbridge accuracy protocol with neurophysiological measures. The M1 theta-accuracy finding offers a candidate neural correlate of the 'receptive' state mediums describe, but only appeared in one of six mediums. Speaks to Controversy #6 (mediumship) on the Pro side. IONS/Windbridge collaboration with Radin and Beischel as co-authors.
Six Windbridge Certified Research Mediums underwent two experiments combining double-blind accuracy testing with 32-channel EEG recording. In Experiment 1, each medium was given only the first name of a deceased person and answered 25 questions during 20-second silent intervals optimized for movement-free EEG collection. Blinded sitters scored both target and decoy transcripts. Three of four evaluated mediums scored significantly above chance (M5: +46.8% accuracy difference, p < 0.00005; M1: +14.2%, p = 0.008; M2: +3.1%, Wilcoxon p = 0.004). Medium M1 showed a significant correlation between frontal theta power and accuracy (p < 0.01, cluster-corrected), with theta decreasing monotonically as accuracy increased. In Experiment 2, all six mediums showed significant EEG differences across four mental states (communication, recollection, perception, fabrication), primarily in gamma and beta bands, though gamma effects could not be distinguished from muscle artifacts.
Links
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Companion
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π Cite this paper
Delorme, Arnaud, Beischel, Julie, Michel, Leena, Boccuzzi, Mark, Radin, Dean, Mills, Paul J (2013). Electrocortical activity associated with subjective communication with the deceased. Frontiers in Psychology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00834
@article{delorme_2013_electrocortical,
title = {Electrocortical activity associated with subjective communication with the deceased},
author = {Delorme, Arnaud and Beischel, Julie and Michel, Leena and Boccuzzi, Mark and Radin, Dean and Mills, Paul J},
year = {2013},
journal = {Frontiers in Psychology},
doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00834},
}