Abstract

Objective: We set out to gain a better understanding of human psychic or “psi” functioning by using a smartphone-based app to gather data from thousands of participants. Our expectations were that psi performance would often be revealed to be in the direction opposite to the participants’ conscious intentions (“expectation-opposing”; previously called “psi-missing”), and that gender and psi belief would be related to performance. Method:We created and launched three iOS-based tasks, available from 2017 to 2020, related to micro-psychokinesis (the ability to mentally influence a random number generator) and precognition (the ability to predict future randomly selected events). We statistically analyzed data from more than 2,613 unique logins and 995,995 contributed trials using null hypothesis significance testing as well as a pre-registered confirmatory analysis. Results: Our expectations were confirmed, and we discovered additional effects post-hoc. Our key findings were: 1) significant expectation-opposing effects, with a confirmatory pre-registered replication of a clear expectation-opposing effect on a micro-pk task, 2) performance correlated with psi belief on all three tasks, 3) performance on two of the three tasks related to gender, 4) men and women apparently used different strategies to perform micro-pk and precognition tasks. Conclusions: We describe our recommendations for future attempts to better understand performance on forced-choice psi tasks. The mnemonic for this strategy is SEARCH: Small effects, Early and exploratory, Accrue data, Recognize diversity in approach, Characterize rather than impose, and Hone in on big results.

Highlights

  • Some of the results observed across trials revealed significant micro-PK effects that were consistent while others differed between the two data batches; we found a replication of an effect of gender on the relative proportion of zeros in the two reference bits

  • Among the 1,881 remaining participants, we found no significant correlations between these dependent variables (DV)

  • Psi belief was positively and independently predicted by gender (p

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Summary

Methods

Experimenter InformationThis was a smartphone-based study and there were no interactions between the experimenters and the participants, though it is likely that many participants knew who the experimenters were. The first batch consisted of data recorded from the launch date of the app, June 12, 2017, to midnight GMT on April 30, 2019, and the second batch consisted of data recorded from 12:01 am GMT on May 1, 2019 to midnight GMT on April 30, 2019. They were separated into two batches because: 1) preliminary data and analyses were presented at a conference in June 2019, and 2) based on that analysis we found effects for which we felt a confirmatory analysis was warranted, so the second batch allowed us to gather those data. The data were only analyzed separately when it was necessary to perform confirmatory analyses (see Participants)

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