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On the Correspondence Between Dream Content and Target Material Under Laboratory Conditions: A Meta-Analysis of Dream-ESP Studies, 1966-2016

πŸ“„ Original study β†—
Storm, Lance, Sherwood, Simon J, Roe, Chris A, Tressoldi, Patrizio E, Rock, Adam J, Di Risio, Lorenzo β€’ 2017 Current Era β€’ telepathy

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

Can people really beam images into each other's dreams? This study is the first big statistical roundup of 50 years of dream-ESP experiments. Across 50 studies and nearly 2,000 trials, dreamers matched their dreams to a hidden target image more often than luck would predict β€” with odds against chance of about one in twenty million. The famous Maimonides Dream Lab got slightly stronger results than later teams, but the gap wasn't statistically meaningful, so independent labs did broadly replicate the finding. It didn't matter whether the experiment tested telepathy, clairvoyance, or precognition (seeing the future) β€” results were similar. Study quality was decent, and better-run studies didn't produce weaker results. One puzzling wrinkle: the effect has shrunk over time even as quality improved. You'd need over a hundred hidden negative studies in file drawers to erase the overall result.

Abstract

In order to further our understanding about the limits of human consciousness and the dream state, we report meta-analytic results on experimental dream-ESP studies for the period 1966 to 2016. Dream-ESP can be defined as a form of extra-sensory perception (ESP) in which a dreaming perceiver ostensibly gains information about a randomly selected target without using the normal sensory modalities or logical inference. Studies fell into two categories: the Maimonides Dream Lab (MDL) studies (n = 14), and independent (non-MDL) studies (n = 36). The MDL dataset yielded mean ES = .33 (SD = 0.37); the non-MDL studies yielded mean ES = .14 (SD = 0.27). The difference between the two mean values was not significant. A homogeneous dataset (N = 50) yielded a mean z of 0.75 (ES = .20, SD = 0.31), with corresponding significant Stouffer Z = 5.32, p = 5.19 Γ— 10-8, suggesting that dream content can be used to identify target materials correctly and more often than would be expected by chance. No significant differences were found between: (a) three modes of ESP (telepathy, clairvoyance, precognition), (b) senders, (c) perceivers, or (d) REM/non-REM monitoring. The ES difference between dynamic targets (e.g., movie-film) and static (e.g., photographs) targets was not significant. We also found that significant improvements in the quality of the studies was not related to ES, but ES did decline over the 51-year period. Bayesian analysis of the same homogeneous dataset yielded results supporting the 'frequentist' finding that the null hypothesis should be rejected. We conclude that the dream-ESP paradigm in parapsychology is worthy of continued investigation, but we recommend design improvements.

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πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Storm, Lance, Sherwood, Simon J, Roe, Chris A, Tressoldi, Patrizio E, Rock, Adam J, Di Risio, Lorenzo (2017). On the Correspondence Between Dream Content and Target Material Under Laboratory Conditions: A Meta-Analysis of Dream-ESP Studies, 1966-2016. International Journal of Dream Research. https://doi.org/10.11588/ijodr.2017.02.28663
BibTeX
@article{storm_2017_correspondence,
  title = {On the Correspondence Between Dream Content and Target Material Under Laboratory Conditions: A Meta-Analysis of Dream-ESP Studies, 1966-2016},
  author = {Storm, Lance and Sherwood, Simon J and Roe, Chris A and Tressoldi, Patrizio E and Rock, Adam J and Di Risio, Lorenzo},
  year = {2017},
  journal = {International Journal of Dream Research},
  doi = {10.11588/ijodr.2017.02.28663},
}