Overview of Current Parapsychology Research in The Former Soviet Union
Overview of Current Parapsychology Research in The Former Soviet Union
Overview of Current Parapsychology Research in The Former Soviet Union
OVERVIEW OF CURRENT
PARAPSYCHOLOGY
RESEARCH IN THE
FORMER SOVIET UNION
Edwin C. May, Ph.D. and Larissa Vilenskaya
ABSTRACT
This paper provides an in-depth discussion of research of anomalous mental phenomena (AMP)
in the former Soviet Union. The authors spent approximately two months in Russia during
1992 and 1993, interacting with researchers in Moscow and Novosibirsk. The authors primarily
discuss experiments in anomalous perturbation (often referred to as psychokinesis-PK and bio
PK) which have been the main focus of AMP research programs in the Soviet Union. In partic
ular, the authors discuss the methodologies and results of experimental attempts by human
operators to affect the following inanimate and animate target systems: (1) microcalorimeters,
(2) electric noise generators, (3) cellular cultures, (4) plant seeds, (5) plant biopotentials, (6)
frequency of impulses emitted by an electricity-generating fish, (7) eating behavior of mice,
(8) person's reaction time, and (9) parameters of human EEG.
I
n this paper, we present some of our observations of anomalous mental
phenomena (AMP) research in the former Soviet Union resulting from our
trip to Moscow in September/October of 1992 and to Moscow and
Novosibirsk in May of 1993. A modified version of this paper was recently
presented at the 36th Annual Convention of the Parapsychological Association
in Toronto, Canada. 1 The purpose of our paper is to provide a narrative
overview of the Russian research. Despite a few exceptions, the material we
have is insufficient to provide: (1) a comprehensive assessment of the experi
mental details, or (2) a formal meta-analysis of classes of studies (e.g., all the
bio-PK investigations). As we are now beginning to work with our Russian
colleagues, we will provide the important additional analyses later, when the
data are available.
AMP research programs in the Soviet Union have primarily focused on experi
mental studies in "distant influence" on animate and inanimate systems, i.e.,
psychokinesis (PK) and bio-PK. There have been numerous attempts at PK
experimentation with such purportedly gifted individuals as Nina Kulagina,2
extensive studies of mental influence on various physical systems,3-6 plant
growth,7,s and plant biopotentials,9,10 and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR)
measurements of plant seeds before and after ostensible bio-PK influence. 11 , 12
Following this trend as observed in available Russian literature, we focus our
paper on the analysis of PK and bio-PK studies.
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Figure 2. Fragment of a record of signals obtained during tests with the operator Alan
v: Chumak. i-establishing "contact" with the detector, 2-first distant mental "effict,"
aimed at raising the temperature. The distance between the operator and the detector is
0.5 m, 3-second "effict, " aimed at cooling. The operator is in an adjacent room at a
distance of about 3 m from the detector. At upper left is the result of turning on the
electric heater.
Usually, during the test, two or three generators were working at the same time.
It is claimed, although there was the lack of a correlation of the signals in the
usual sense, that it was possible to observe in different channels the simulta
neous (or with a small shift in time) appearance of pockets of periodic pulsations
with a different period; sometimes there was also a simultaneous reduction of
the noise level. At least one example is mentioned when an operator simulta
neouslyaffected both the micro calorimeter and electric noise generator (Figure 5).
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Figure 3. Example of a record of the signal which contains a long pocket of oscillations
within a period of 20 sec. The noise generator is a 1LB201 microcircuit.
The most important question is: what is the probability of these "ordered"
segments appearing by chance? Gurtovoy and Parkhomov do not give a definite
answer to this question, thus making evaluation of this study more difficult.
On the other hand, the "ordering" influence of the mind was hypothesized in
other experiments, such as the attempted influence on background radioactivity
conducted by Dean Radin,17 who concluded that consciousness essentially
"injects order" into random systems (p. 148).
Figure 4. Amplitude growth ofthe noise signal at the time ofthe "effect" of the operator
P. The noise source is a 1LB201 microcircuit (MOS transistors). The time ofthe "effect"
is noted by the horizontal line.
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In more than 50 pilot tests with different operators, in only two tests were
anomalous changes of flicker-noise amplitude observed. According to Kornilov
and Rayevsky, the probability that these fluctuations of noise amplitude
occurred by chance is close to 10-6 . The researchers noted that in the process
of operators' influence, instances of "orderliness" of noise fluctuations described
in the study by GUftovoy and Parkhomov 4 ,5 were repeatedly observed.
However, they do not consider these peculiarities of the transistors' behavior
during the operators' influence to be positive effects, because the mechanism
of calculating the probability of obtaining such events by chance is fairly subjec
tive. According to Gurtovoy, however, an almost "flat" line shown in Figure 5
was never observed during the background periods.
I
n this section, we discuss studies conducted by several individuals we met
while in Russia: the above-mentioned Dr. Georgy K. Gurtovoy and
Alexander G. Parkhomov, Dr. Sergei V. Speransky of the Institute of
Hygiene in Novosibirsk and Leonid M. Porvin of the Center for Research of
Bioinformational Unity of Systems in Zelenograd, Moscow region,18 Dr. Tatyana
Krendeleva and her associates of Moscow State University;19,20 Dr. Elvira V.
Morozova,7,8 of the Russian Agricultural Academy in Moscow, as well as the
experiments of psychiatrist Dr. Dmitri G. Mirza and biophysicist Dr. Yuri S.
Dolin in Moscow. A broad range of biological target systems, from tissue
cultures to plants, animals, and humans, were used in these experiments. For
some studies, we provide more detailed descriptions than for others, depending
on the amount of information at our disposal and the availability of the original
sources to other researchers. If the original is a hard-to-find publication in the
Russian language, or we describe the studies from pre-publication copies of
manuscripts, or we base our discussion on personal interaction with the
researchers, we attempt to address the methodologies and obtained results in a
greater length.
Biologists Dr. Tatyana Krendeleva and Sergei I. Pogosyan and their associates
at the Division of Biophysics, Department of Biology, Moscow State University,
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Petersit) to operators' attempts to "slow down" the fish. This was a replica
tion of a earlier study by Protasov and his associates 22 conducted in the late
1970s at the Research Institute of Evolutionary Morphology and Clinical
Ecology in Moscow and published in a major Soviet scientific journal. The
dependent variable in these tests was the time interval between the electric
pulses emitted by the fish. In the preliminary series (screening) with unselected
subjects, six out of 31 trials were successful (i.e., a success is defined as greater
than 3 standard deviations), p < 3 x 10- 12 • In the subsequent formal experi
ment, eight subjects performed 2S trials, 21 being successful, p < 3 x 10- 18 .
In these tests, operators started working at random moments of time. The
tests were conducted with the purpose of "calming down" the fish; thus, the
shifts that occurred were in the direction of an increase in the pulse intervals.
At the same time, as Gurtovoy and Parkhomov pointed out, it is known that
the electric fish primarily responds to changes in its environment (e.g., a change
of temperature, lighting, magnetic field or to sound) with a decrease in the
pulse intervals. Still, although the controls as described by Gurtovoy and
Parkhomov4,5 seem to be adequate, we believe more caution is necessary in
working with biological systems that are highly reactive to changes in their
environment.
Dr. Sergei V. Speransky, whom one of us (LV) has known for over 20 years,
holds a Ph.D. in Biology and is a specialist in toxicology with a long-term
interest in parapsychology. As a biologist, he has always been interested in
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Figure 7. Results of the tests with two plants: Operaor's effect vs. control
The current study that Speransky shared with us during our trip was conducted
in collaboration with Leonid M. Porvin, a specialist in electronic engineering,
who, according to Speransky, developed a "technology" for achieving altered
states of consciousness conducive to "distant influence."18 In these tests, Porvin
was in Moscow, and five target and five control mice subgroups (13 mice in
each, 260 in total) were in Novosibirsk, a distance of 1,700 miles. The
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any research groups in Russia are interested in exploring the efficacy
of mental healing, both in biological experiments and clinical
studies. Dr. Dmitry G. Mirza, head of the Research Division of
the National for Traditional Folk Medicine, and his associate V. I.
Kartsev conducted three experimental series on bio-PK (healing) influence on
grey mice exposed to lethal doses of ionizing radiation. 25 The mice were
subjected to 850, 900, and 915 rad from a Cs 137 source in the first, second,
and third series, respectively. All the mice for each series (i.e., the test and
control groups) were irradiated simultaneously with the 30 rad/min dose. There
were 10 mice in each test and 10 in each control group (with one exception
in the second series where one test group contained nine mice). In the first
series, the operators (healers) worked with animals 15 minutes after their irradi
ation; in the second series, the bio-PK effect was used preventively, i.e., 15-20
minutes before the irradiation; in the third series, a combination of preventive
and post-irradiation effects were used. The dependent variable was the survival
rate of mice after the irradiation.
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Figure 8. The mortality rate of mice after gamma-irradiation of 900 rad in control
and with attempted preventive bio-Pk effect. (1) control; (2) operator N G. Balashov;
(3) 0. G. Borisoglebskaya; (4) M. B. Fatkin (long-distance); (5) N.l. Pokazeyev.
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he results of the second and third series are most interesting. There
were four experimental and four control groups in the second series
that was conducted beginning August 13, 1991. For controls, the
mortality was 1000/0, i.e., all 40 mice died without a single one surviving the
19th day after the irradiation. In the test groups, in 19 days, the mortality
was 90 0/0, 50 0/0, 400/0, and 22% respectively (the last was in the group of nine
mice) (Figure 8). While other operators worked at relatively small distances
(meters from the mice), the operaror who turned out to be the most successful
affected mice located in Moscow from the town of Yalta in the Crimea, at a
distance of about 800 miles. In January 1993, 15 mice from 39 in the test
group were still alive as compared to zero in the control group. In the third
series, nine out of 10 animals in one test subgroup and all 10 in another
subgroup survived, as compared to three mice in the control group. The
researchers in Moscow plan to replicate the experiment.
Before the actual test, each subject was asked to solve an additional math
problem to "enter" the working mode. Unknowingly to the subjects, they were
divided into four groups: (1) a group subjected to "mental interference" when
they were solving the first three (1-3) problems; (2) a group subjected to "mental
interference" when they were solving the last three (4-6) problems; (3) a group
subjected to "mental interference" when they were solving problems 2, 4, 6;
and (4) a control group not subjected to "mental interference" at any time.
The results were as follows: when "mental interference" was used when the
subjects were working on problems 1-3, there was a statistically significant increase
D
r. Yuri S. Dolin, a biophysicist, whose experiments with plants we
discussed above, showed us the equipment and design of another
experiment. While in Moscow in the fall of 1992, we were invited to
actually participate in one trial. In this test, a subject was located in a dark,
sound-proof, electrically-shielded chamber, his electroencephalogram (EEG) was
monitored, and changes in alpha waves as the result of remote attention were
recorded. The dependent variable was the relative alpha power change during
effort compared to control periods. In addition, "placebo" trials were employed
when "distant influence" was attempted by a person without "special ability
and/or training." The data obtained in "placebo" trials were similar to those
in control trials.
Dolin later showed us a graphic representation of the EEG analysis in two experi
ments conducted during our visit to his lab, including the one in which we
participated. One of these tests showed a "perfect" EEG recording of the
complete suppression of alpha during the time of "remote influence" (Figure 9).
We were told that that particular test was a routine trial that directly followed
the trial in which we took part.
A recently published paper by Dolin and his associates 26 provides more details
of the above tests. There were experiments conducted both at short distances,
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Figure 9. Single trial example of remote influence with EEG recording (suppression of
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when a "sender" (operator) was from 5 to 100 meters from the subject
("receiver"), and at longer distances, from 1 to 10 kilometers. The choice
whether a given trial was a test or control and the direction of influence (activa
tion or inhibition of the subject's alpha rhythm) were determined randomly.
The subject was blind as to whether the given trial was a test or control. With
four operators and two receivers, 109 trials were conducted: 53 control trials
and 56 test trials. From these, 21 test trials had the operator attempting "activa
tion" of the subject (thereby intending to decrease the subject's alpha power)
and 21 test trials attempted "inhibition," thereby intending to increase the
subject's alpha power; in the rest of the test trials, operators did not specify the
direction of influence. Thus, the main analysis was conducted for the trials in
which the direction of influence was specified, in the range of alpha (8-13 Hz).
The data for beta and theta waves were also recorded; no effects were observed
in these frequency bands.
D
r. Natalia N. Lebedeva, a biologist from the Research Institute of
Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology of the Russian Academy
of Sciences in Moscow, showed us preliminary results of a pilot bio
PK study. A subject in a shielded chamber was given a standard task to respond
to a visual stimulus (a dot appearing on a computer screen at random time
intervals) by pressing a button, and the subject's reaction time was measured.
At certain time intervals, an operator located outside the shielded chamber was
asked to affect the subject's right hand to slow down his/her performance with
this hand and thereby increase his/her reaction time. This study is still in
progress, and evaluation of the data has not yet been completed. According
to Lebedeva, preliminary analysis of the data shows a statistically significant
increase in the subject's reaction time during the operator's effect (when the
subject performed the task with the right hand affected by the operator) in the
majority of cases (70-800/0) of the tests. In some cases the significant increase
in reaction time for the right (affected) hand included the period of time after
the operator's effect as well. Thus, a certain degree of variability of the data
probably requires the use of different methods for statistical processing and/or
changes in the experimental protocol, with the purpose being the establishment
of all the variables and factors which may affect the results, e.g., physiological,
methodological, operator/receiver compatibility or mental images created by the
operator. In discussions with Dr. Lebedeva in our laboratory, we identified
some methodological improvements for a formal replication.
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Figure 10. Results of tests on "distant influence" with EEG recording. Changes in the
alpha power observed during activation of alpha vs. control; the data are shown for the
right brain hemisphere.
under the auspices of prestigious research institutions. At the same time, some
of the studies have methodological problems. For many of them, however, we
do not yet have sufficient information to provide a detailed evaluation.
Therefore, instead of discussing each of these studies separately, we summarized
them in Table II. Although the emphasis is on bio-PK experiments, one PK
attempt to affect inanimate systems is included as well.
CONCLUSIONS
In concluding this review of some aspects of parapsychology in the former
Soviet Union, we would like to point out that in Russia, as elsewhere, there is
a wide range of research skills. We found the researchers to be enthusiastic
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Figure 11. Results of tests on "distant influence" with EEG recording. Changes in the
alpha power observed during inhibition of alpha vs. control; the data are shown for the
right brain hemisphere.
but, in some cases, the experimental work suffers. At times, some experimenters
are not as self-critical as good science might dictate. Varied writing styles and
reporting standards often make formal analysis difficult. Additionally, the
"culture" is strongly biased toward an influence (PK) model. Alternative
theoretical views, similar to the Intuitive Data Sorting (IDS) informational
model, 27 are not only non-existent, but in discussions are often rejected
outright, without being examined.
Nevertheless, one conclusion can be made with a high degree of certainty: for
a number of years, researchers in the former Soviet Union have been engaged
in a broad range of studies of anomalous mental phenomena, primarily in the
PK and bio-PK areas. Such prestigious institutions as Moscow State University
and the research institutes of the Academy of Sciences have been involved in
AMP studies that are supported by both government and private
• • •
CORRESPONDENCE: Edwin C. May, Ph.D. • Science Applications International
Corporation • 1010 El Camino Real, Suite 330 • Menlo Park, CA 94025
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: We thank Dr. Marilyn]. Schlitz, Mrs. Charlotte Berney, and Mr.
Douglas MacGowan for their comments and editorial assistance.