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			by Peter Aldhous11 November 2010
 
			from
			
			NewScientist Website 
			
			Spanish version 
			  
			  
			 
			  
			  
			Extraordinary claims don't come much 
			more extraordinary than this: events that haven't yet happened can 
			influence our behavior.
 Parapsychologists have made outlandish claims about precognition - 
			knowledge of unpredictable future events - for years. But the fringe 
			phenomenon is about to get a mainstream airing: a paper providing 
			evidence for its existence has been accepted for publication by the 
			leading social psychology journal.
 
 What's more, skeptical psychologists who have pored over a 
			
			preprint 
			of the paper say they can't find any significant flaws.
 
				
				"My personal view is that this is 
				ridiculous and can't be true," says 
				
				Joachim Krueger of 
				Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, who has 
				
				blogged 
				about the work on the Psychology Today website.    
				"Going after the methodology and the 
				experimental design is the first line of attack. But frankly, I 
				didn't see anything. Everything seemed to be in good order." 
			  
			  
			Critical mass
 The paper, due to appear in the 
			
			Journal of Personality and Social 
			Psychology before the end of the year, is the culmination of eight 
			years' work by 
			Daryl Bem of Cornell University in Ithaca, New 
			York.
 
				
				"I purposely waited until I thought 
				there was a critical mass that wasn't a statistical fluke," he 
				says. 
			It describes a series of experiments 
			involving more than 1000 student volunteers.  
			  
			In most of the tests, Bem took 
			well-studied psychological phenomena and simply reversed the 
			sequence, so that the event generally interpreted as the cause 
			happened after the tested behavior rather than before it.
 In one experiment, students were shown a list of words and then 
			asked to recall words from it, after which they were told to type 
			words that were randomly selected from the same list. Spookily, the 
			students were better at recalling words that they would later type.
 
 In another study, Bem adapted research on "priming" - the effect of 
			a subliminally presented word on a person's response to an image. 
			For instance, if someone is momentarily flashed the word "ugly", it 
			will take them longer to decide that a picture of a kitten is 
			pleasant than if "beautiful" had been flashed.
 
			  
			Running the experiment back-to-front, 
			Bem found that the priming effect seemed to work backwards in time 
			as well as forwards. 
			  
			  
			'Stroke of 
			genius'
 
 Exploring time-reversed versions of established psychological 
			phenomena was "a stroke of genius", says the skeptical Krueger.
 
			  
			Previous research in parapsychology has 
			used idiosyncratic set-ups such as 
			
			Ganzfeld experiments, in which 
			volunteers listen to 
			
			white noise and are presented with a uniform 
			visual field to create a state allegedly conducive to effects 
			including clairvoyance and telepathy. By contrast, Bem set out to 
			provide tests that mainstream psychologists could readily evaluate.
 The effects he recorded were small but statistically significant. In 
			another test, for instance, volunteers were told that an erotic 
			image was going to appear on a computer screen in one of two 
			positions, and asked to guess in advance which position that would 
			be. The image's eventual position was selected at random, but 
			volunteers guessed correctly 53.1 per cent of the time.
 
 That may sound unimpressive - truly random guesses would have been 
			right 50 per cent of the time, after all.
 
			  
			But well-established phenomena such as 
			the ability of low-dose aspirin to prevent heart attacks are based 
			on similarly small effects, notes 
			
			Melissa Burkley of Oklahoma 
			State University in Stillwater, who has 
			
			also blogged about Bem's 
			work at Psychology Today. 
			  
			  
			Respect for a 
			maverick
 
 So far, the paper has held up to scrutiny.
 
				
				"This paper went through a series of 
				reviews from some of our most trusted reviewers," says 
				
				Charles 
				Judd of the University of Colorado at Boulder, who heads the 
				section of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 
				editorial board that handled the paper. 
			Indeed, although Bem is a self-described 
			"maverick" with a long-standing interest in paranormal phenomena, he 
			is also a respected psychologist with a reputation for running 
			careful experiments.  
			  
			He is best known for the theory of 
			
			self-perception, which argues that people infer their attitudes from 
			their own behavior in much the same way as they assess the attitudes 
			of others.
			Bem says his paper was reviewed by four experts who proposed 
			amendments, but still recommended publication.  
			  
			Still, the journal 
			will publish a skeptical editorial commentary alongside the paper, 
			says Judd.  
				
				"We hope it spurs people to try to 
				replicate these effects." 
			One failed attempt at replication has 
			
			already been posted online.  
			  
			In this study, 
			
			Jeff Galak of 
			Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and 
			
			Leif 
			Nelson of the University of California, Berkeley, employed an online 
			panel called 
			
			Consumer Behavior Lab in an effort to repeat Bem's 
			findings on the recall of words.
 Bem argues that online surveys are inconclusive, because it's 
			impossible to know whether volunteers have paid sufficient attention 
			to the task. Galak concedes that this is a limitation of the initial 
			study, but says he is now planning a follow-up involving student 
			volunteers that will more closely repeat the design of Bem's 
			word-recall experiment.
 
 This seems certain to be just the first exchange in a lively debate: 
			Bem says that dozens of researchers have already contacted him 
			requesting details of the work.
 
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