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Precognitive Remote Viewing in the Chicago Area: A Replication of the Stanford Experiment

πŸ“„ Original study β†—
Dunne, Brenda J, Bisaha, John P β€’ 1979 Ganzfeld Era β€’ remote_viewing

Plain English Summary

Back in 1979, two completely untrained volunteers tried something wild: they attempted to describe randomly chosen locations in Chicago before those locations were even picked. That's right -- the targets hadn't been selected yet when the participants started writing down their impressions. Three independent judges, who had no idea which description matched which site, ranked how well the descriptions fit. The results were striking: half the descriptions nailed first-place rankings, and the overall statistical score hit p < .008, meaning this was very unlikely to be just luck. This successfully repeated Stanford's famous remote viewing experiments, but with a tougher twist -- ordinary people, no training, and a design where the future target hadn't even been chosen yet. The study was later declassified from CIA Stargate program files.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Dunne, Brenda J, Bisaha, John P (1979). Precognitive Remote Viewing in the Chicago Area: A Replication of the Stanford Experiment. Journal of Parapsychology.
BibTeX
@article{dunne_bisaha_1979_precognitive_remote,
  title = {Precognitive Remote Viewing in the Chicago Area: A Replication of the Stanford Experiment},
  author = {Dunne, Brenda J and Bisaha, John P},
  year = {1979},
  journal = {Journal of Parapsychology},
}