False-Positive Effect in the Radin Double-Slit Experiment on Observer Consciousness as Determined with the Advanced Meta-Experimental Protocol
β‘ Contested βπ Appears in:
Plain English Summary
Can human consciousness change the behavior of light just by watching it? That's what Dean Radin's famous double-slit experiment claimed. In a dramatic twist, the same funder and investigator who ran the original study tried to replicate it β this time with rigorous blinding (no one knew which data was which until analysis was done) and a clever trick: they ran "sham" experiments with no observers at all. The result? The consciousness effect completely vanished β zero confirmation. But here's the kicker: the equipment itself produced a statistically significant blip even when nobody was watching, and that blip was roughly the same size as the supposed mind-over-matter effect from the original study. This strongly suggests the earlier "consciousness" results were actually just the machine acting up. The testing method they developed β called the Advanced Meta-Experimental Protocol β could become a powerful new standard for checking whether tiny, hard-to-detect effects are real or just measurement noise.
Actual Paper Abstract
Prior work by Radin et al. (2012, 2016) reported the astonishing claim that an anomalous effect on double-slit (DS) light-interference intensity had been measured as a function of quantum-based observer consciousness. Given the radical implications, could there exist an alternative explanation, other than an anomalous consciousness effect, such as artifacts including systematic methodological error (SME)? To address this question, a conceptual replication study involving 10,000 test trials was commissioned to be performed blindly by the same investigator who had reported the original results. The commissioned study performed confirmatory and strictly predictive tests with the advanced meta-experimental protocol (AMP), including with systematic negative controls and the concept of the sham-experiment, i.e., counterfactual meta-experimentation. Whereas the replication study was unable to confirm the original results, the AMP was able to identify an unacceptably low true-negative detection rate with the sham-experiment in the absence of test subjects. The false-positive detection rate reached 50%, whereby the false-positive effect, which would be indistinguishable from the predicted true-positive effect, was significant at p = 0.021 (Ο = β2.02; N = 1,250 test trials). The false-positive effect size was about 0.01%, which is within an-order-of-magnitude of the claimed consciousness effect (0.001%; Radin et al., 2016). The false-positive effect, which indicates the presence of significant SME in the Radin DS-experiment, suggests that skepticism should replace optimism concerning the radical claim that an anomalous quantum consciousness effect has been observed in a controlled laboratory setting.
Research Notes
The strongest empirical challenge to Radin's double-slit program. Uniquely, the study was commissioned by the same funder and performed by the same investigator as the original, using pre-specified blinded analyses. The AMP methodology β testing for false positives via sham experiments without subjects β could become a gold standard for ultra-weak-effects research. Directly supported by Tremblay's independent re-analysis finding anomalies in control data.
A conceptual replication of the Radin double-slit (DS) experiment was commissioned using 10,000 test trials performed blindly by the same investigator who reported the original results. The Advanced Meta-Experimental Protocol (AMP) implemented systematic negative, positive, and time-reversed controls alongside a sham-experiment conducted without test subjects. The replication failed to confirm the original anomalous consciousness effect (0% true-positive match rate). Critically, the sham-experiment revealed a statistically significant false-positive effect (p = 0.021, Ο = β2.02, N = 1,250) in exactly the test category predicted for a true-positive result. The false-positive effect size (~0.01%) was within an order of magnitude of the claimed consciousness effect (0.001%), and its statistical significance matched that of the original study. These findings demonstrate that the DS-apparatus produces significant effects without observers present, calling into question all prior claims of anomalous observer consciousness effects.
Links
Related Papers
Critiques
Companion
- Independent re-analysis of alleged mind-matter interaction in double-slit experimental data β Tremblay, Nicolas (2019)
- Response: Commentary: False-Positive Effect in the Radin Double-Slit Experiment on Observer Consciousness as Determined With the Advanced Meta-Experimental Protocol β Walleczek, Jan (2020)
- On the Double-Slit Experiment of Dean Radin β PitkΓ€nen, Matti (2017)
Same Research Program
Replication Of
Also by these authors
More in Skeptical
Cognitive Styles and Psi: Psi Researchers Are More Similar to Skeptics Than to Lay Believers
Searching for the Impossible: Parapsychology's Elusive Quest
Cross-Examining the Case for Precognition: Comment on Mossbridge and Radin (2018)
N,N-Dimethyltryptamine and the Pineal Gland: Separating Fact from Myth
Paranormal psychic believers and skeptics: a large-scale test of the cognitive differences hypothesis
π Cite this paper
Walleczek, Jan, von Stillfried, Nikolaus (2019). False-Positive Effect in the Radin Double-Slit Experiment on Observer Consciousness as Determined with the Advanced Meta-Experimental Protocol. Frontiers in Psychology. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01891
@article{walleczek_2019_false_positive_amp,
title = {False-Positive Effect in the Radin Double-Slit Experiment on Observer Consciousness as Determined with the Advanced Meta-Experimental Protocol},
author = {Walleczek, Jan and von Stillfried, Nikolaus},
year = {2019},
journal = {Frontiers in Psychology},
doi = {10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01891},
}