Psychokinesis and Telekinesis
Exploring Mind and Matter
Evidence for Psychokinesis
Rhine's Early Studies
J. B. Rhine conducting a PK experiment using dice in a machanical dice tumbler.
(Courtesy Foundation for Research on the Nature of Man)
In 1934, several months prior to publishing  his famous paper on Extra-Sensory Perception, Dr. J. B. Rhine received a  visit from a young gambler. After comparing notes on conditions for  success in psychic testing, he remarked that similar conditions seemed  to favor his luck in gambling. Furthermore, he claimed that he himself  was sometimes able to exercise a mind over matter effect on  dice-throwing games. While belief in such an influence on dice was both  common and ancient, until then it had not been deemed a serious problem  for scientific study. Rhine discovered that preliminary experimentation  would be quick, easy, and inexpensive. The results proved encouraging  enough to warrant further research.
Experiments  continued during the next decade using protocols that systematically  eliminated bias from unbalanced dice. The dice were placed in special  cups, so subjects could not use special tricks to throw them. Still  later, the dice were placed in electrically-driven rotating cages and  were also photographed automatically in order to eliminate experimenter  error. In general, the tests entailed asking the subjects to will the  fall of the dice with selected target faces showing. Numerous throws  were made in succession for each target before another target was  chosen.
By  the end of 1941, a total of 651,216 experimental die throws had been  conducted. The combined results of these experiments pointed to a  phenomenon with 10115 to 1 odds against chance occurrence. Nevertheless,  Rhine hesitated to publish his results. The scientific world was still  reacting emotionally to his announced proof of ESP, and he felt no need  then to raise eyebrows by announcing another unorthodox discovery.
In  1942, with most of the staff at the Parapsychology Laboratory called  away to war, continued experimentation in PK proved difficult. At this  time, Rhine went over the records of earlier experiments so conducted  that an analysis of position effects could be made, similar to the  decline of high ESP scoring toward the end of experimental sessions,  detected a few months earlier. If the above chance results had been  caused by probability, artifacts, or illegitimate means, one would  expect the distribution of hits would be consistent throughout the  experiment and would not decline.
The  results of this survey indicated there were more hits near the  beginning of each run of 24 die throws. There were also more hits during  the earlier runs of each experimental session which would typically  last for ten runs. These results were not expected or even considered by  the experimenters and subjects at the time of the experiments. The odds  against such distribution occurring by chance were about a hundred  million to one. This evidence of a presumably psychological effect,  similar to that noted with ESP, made a case for psychokinesis strong  enough to warrant publication. The first of the papers appeared in the Journal of Parapsychology in 1943. Many others followed.
In  1946 a study was published that pitted the psychokinetic skills of  veteran gamblers against those of divinity students. In this contest  atmosphere, both groups scored well above chance expectations. 
PK With Random Number Generators (RNGs)
PK test equipment
(Courtesy Helmut Schmidt)
The random number generator experiments  pioneered by Helmut Schmidt, previously described as tests of  precognition, have also been used extensively as tests for  psychokinesis. As mentioned earlier, it seems theoretically impossible  to clearly distinguish between psychokinesis and precognition in  quantitative research. Generally, the tests for psychokinesis are those  in which the experimenter instructs the subject to will or intend that a  particular target be selected by the RNG. This reduces the possibility  that the subject could be using precognition, but does not eliminate the  possibility of experimenter precognition. The hypothesis of intuitive  data sorting suggests that the subject might use precognition to start  the RNG at the exact time required to match the preselected PK target  sequence.
One  interesting version of the Schmidt RNG studies involved the cooperation  of Robert Morris and Luther Rudolph at Syracuse  University, with the  experimental protocol published prior to the beginning of the  experiment., These studies, which used prerecorded targets, were  reviewed by skeptic James Alcock in a report for the National Research  Council's study on methods for enhancing human performance. Alcock, who  had access to the pertinent raw data, admitted that this study was much  better executed than other studies by Schmidt and merited further  replication attempts.
An  elegant and sophisticated research program involving Random Event  Generators has been underway for a number of years at Princeton  University under the aegis of Dean Emeritus of Engineering, Robert Jahn,  and management of psychologist Brenda Dunne. Other staff members  include psychologists Roger Nelson and Angela Thompson, electrical  engineer John Bradish, and physicist York Dobyns. 
In  the formal test series, generation rates of either 100 or 1000 per  second are used, and each trial comprises 200 binary samples. The count  data are permanently recorded on a strip printer as well as being  entered on line into computer memory. The subject receives immediate  feedback via electronic displays which show the number of trials, the  number of hits in the last trial, and the average number of hits since  some predetermined starting point. The REG and the on-line IBM PC/AT  computer independently calculate the mean of each trial and the standard  deviation for every block of fifty trials.
REG Testing at the Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research Program
The  equipment can be run in one of two modes, either manual or automatic.  In the former case, the machine will generate a trial only when a switch  is pressed; while in the automatic mode, once started, the machine will  automatically initiate a block of fifty trials.
There  are two types of procedure, either "volitional mode," in which case the  subject chooses whether to aim for a high score (PK+) or a low score  (PK-) in a given run, or "instructed mode" where some kind of random  process determines which way the subject is to aim.
There are also  baseline runs interspersed ("in some reasonable fashion," the nature of  which is unspecified) with the PK runs; in this case the subject is to  exert no influence, so that these will serve as a randomization check.  The choice of volitional/instructed mode and automatic/manual mode are  "normally left to the preference of the operators (subjects), but they  are encouraged to undertake additional series employing the other modes  for comparison."
The  formal data base consists of well over 750,000 trials (or 150,000,000  binary digits) carried out on two different machines by thirty-three  different subjects over a period of nearly ten years. Typically, a  session had three types of trials: high aim, low aim, and a control  series. Pooled, overall results of the high- and low-aim trials are  clear: significantly higher scores for high aim; significantly low  scores for low aim. The outcome of the control trials was illuminating.  Here the subjects were told not to try to influence the REG. Presumably,  they hoped their data would be "normal." In fact, although the mean  score was almost identical with the theoretical mean, the distribution  was unique: a statistically significant surplus of scores at the precise  theoretical mean. When control, high-aim, and low-aim series are  pooled, the distribution is what would be expected by chance. This  result, which may be the consequence of the subjects' intentions to  "achieve a baseline" in the control condition, shows the difficulty of  conducting psi experiments with a true control group. 
Interestingly,  both earlier and later calibration trials nicely conformed to a normal  statistical curve, showing that the equipment was probably operating  properly. If psi is operating in the ostensible control tests, then the  critics' demands for additional control tests seems naive.
Ironically,  comparable results were obtained using a pseudo-random noise source  (i.e., based on both computer algorithms and prerecorded targets). This  finding makes it difficult to interpret the Princeton data in terms of a  conventional psychokinesis hypothesis. How can one psychokinetically  influence targets which have already been determined? For this reason,  the Princeton team does not attempt to describe their research program  as a test of PK, but simply refers to the program as a study of  anomalous man-machine interactions.
The  Princeton team has gone to great lengths to try to ensure that their  equipment is unbiased. Internal circuits are continually monitored with  regard to internal temperature, input voltage, etc. Successive switching  of the relationship between the sign of the noise and the sign of the  output pulse on a trial-to-trial basis was done to provide a further  safeguard against machine bias. Results were automatically recorded and  analyzed. Extensive tests of the machine's output and its individual  components were also carried out at times separate from the test  sessions. The provision of baseline trials interspersed with test trials  provided a randomization check which overcame some of the weaknesses of  Schmidt's procedure.
Psi  researcher John Palmer has drawn attention to the fact that there is no  documentation regarding measures to prevent data tampering by subjects.  This is of concern since the subject was left alone in the room during  the formal sessions along with the REG.  
In  evaluating these studies, skeptic James Alcock claimed that only one  subject (Operator 10) accounted for virtually all the significance  departures from chance in the Princeton studies. Noting that details  regarding precautions against subject cheating were not specified,  Alcock stated:
I  am not trying to suggest that this subject cheated; I am only pointing  out that it would appear that such a possibility is not ruled out. Had  the subject been monitored at all times, such a worry could have been  avoided or at least reduced. 
The  Princeton team has chosen a policy of keeping the identity of all  experimental subjects anonymous -- among other reasons, in order to  eliminate motivation for subjects to cheat. However, the fact that  Subject 10 contributed considerably more to the database than any other  subject, suggests that this individual was either a member of the  experimental team or someone who had become a close friend of the  experimenters. As such, Subject 10 might well have had access to  information which would make it possible to tamper with the data  recording system. 
In  response to the criticisms of Palmer and Alcock, the Princeton  researchers have prepared a detailed analysis of the equipment,  calibration procedures and various precautions against data-tampering.  According to the researchers, the automated and redundant on-line  recording of data preclude data tampering -- as does the protocol  requirement that the printer record be on one continuous, unbroken paper  strip. It would appear that all necessary precautions have been taken,  short of submitting subjects to constant visual observation. The  subjects are submitted to intermittent visual observation which the  researchers believe is sufficient to control against tampering with the  equipment, given their particular setup.
In  further response to Alcock's critique, the Princeton team conducted  further analyses of the data which show that the anomalous RNG effects  were contributed by most of the subjects, and were not dependent upon  the scores of Subject 10. Several other subjects, who participated in  fewer experimental trials, actually had scores with greater chance  deviations. By analyzing the data from only the first series of 7,500  trials (1,500,000 binary digits) from each subject, it was possible to  level the influence that Subject 10 exerted on the database. In this  analysis, with each subject carrying an equal weight, the results were  significantly beyond chance. Another analysis was conducted which  eliminated all of the data from Subject 10. This, too, was statistically  significant.
A  comprehensive meta-analytic review of the RNG research literature  encompassing all known RNG studies between 1959 and 1987 has been  reported by Radin and Nelson, comprising over 800 experimental and  control studies conducted by a total of 68 different investigators. The  probability 597 experimental series was p < 10-35, whereas 235  control series yielded an overall score well within the range of chance  fluctuation. In order to account for the observed experimental results  on the basis of selective reporting (assuming no other methodological  flaws), it would require "file drawers" full of more than 50,000  unreported studies averaging chance results.
Some  people seem to produce data in random number generator (RNG)  experiments that display idiosyncratic patterning that appears to be  consistent from one run to the next. To explore the idea of  person-unique signatures, Dean Radin, working at Princeton University,  used a powerful, new "neural network" computational technique that is  proving to be adept at discovering weak patterns in noisy data. 
Dean Radin
Neural  networks are a form of parallel processing based upon research about  how the brain encodes and processes information.
 The power of these  networks rests upon the discovery that when numerous elementary  processing units are richly interconnected under the right conditions,  they can automatically learn to associate arbitrarily complex inputs  with arbitrarily complex outputs. Information processing in these  networks takes place in the interactions among large numbers of  artificial neurons. Learning takes place by changing the interconnection  strengths between neurons.
The  study involved training a network to associate data with given  individuals, then observing whether the trained network could  successfully identify these people based upon new data. Two sub-datasets  were required for each person: One was used to train the network and  the other was used to see whether the trained network could transfer its  knowledge to new data. Thus, each series of 50 runs was split in half,  using the first half as the training set and the second half as the  transfer set. Results showed that these networks were able to learn to  associate data with 32 different individuals, then, in statistical  terms, successfully transfer that knowledge to new data.  
  
PK Placement Studies
A number of researchers have conducted  studies designed to determine whether naked human intention could  affect the movement of moving objects. The most recent version of this  approach is the database of studies using a random mechanical cascade at  Princeton  University's Engineering Anomalies Research program. 
The  experimental apparatus allows 9000 polystyrene balls to drop through a  matrix of 330 pegs, scattering into 19 collecting bins. As the balls  enter the bins, exact counts are accumulated photoelectrically,  displayed as feedback for the operator and recorded by a computer.  Subjects are asked to concentrate on shifting the mean of the developing  distribution of balls to the right or left, relative to a concurrently  developing baseline distribution. Over three thousand experimental runs  have been conducted with twenty-five individuals. The results are  significantly beyond chance expectation.
The  Princeton University researchers note that virtually all of the  statistically significant results have come from a deviation of the  balls to the left of the baseline. This, they claim, cannot be  attributed to any known physical asymmetry in the system. 
  
Chinese Reports of Psychokinesis Associated with ESP
Reports of psi research in China claim  that certain subjects showed consistent success in ESP tests.,, A  report from the Chinese Academy of Sciences states that if the ESP  response was incorrect there was no change at the target; but that, in  over 700 trials when the ESP response was correct, there was always an  accompanying PK effect at the target location. These effects included  clouding of X-ray or photographic film; or pronounced changes in the  records of photoelectric tubes, thermoluminescence docimeters, or  biological detectors. It should be noted, however, that the quality and  reliability of reports of Chinese research is very inconsistent. At  least one set of knowledgable observers believes that some reported  results resulted from slight-of-hand.
Scott  Hubbard, Edwin May and Harold Puthoff at SRI International in Menlo  Park, California, searched for such changes using a detector that the  Chinese had found most sensitive -- a photomultiplier tube. ESP targets  were slides of scenes from the National Geographic. There were four  subjects with six sessions each. The pooled sessions showed significant  ESP success. The researchers then correlated ESP scores with four  measures of photomultiplier output: low-amplitude increase and decrease  and high-amplitude increase and decrease in number of pulses. One  correlation was significant: the correlation with increase in the number  of high-amplitude pulses, as the Chinese had reported. 
  
PK Metal-Bending
A renewed interest has recently developed  in large-scale (macro) PK effects, particularly metal-bending. The most  extensive research on metal-bending has been conducted by physicist  John Hasted at the University of London's Birkbeck College.
John Hasted
His  subjects were mostly adolescents who had developed an interest in  metal-bending upon exposure to the public performances of Uri Geller.  They were asked to bend or deform latchkeys or bars of aluminum alloy  without touching them. The specimens were attached to resistive strain  guages or (in later work) piezoelectric sensors. Signals from these  devices were then amplified and registered on chart recorders.
Actual  bending was observed in only a minority of sessions, however anomalous  signals frequently appeared on the chart records -- from sensors  separated up to several feet from each other. This led Hasted to  hypothesize an unknown form of conduction of electrical charge from the  subjects' bodies through the atmosphere to the sensors.
Hasted  claimed that the subjects had no opportunity to interact directly with  the chart recorder. Furthermore, he employed dummy loads along with  electrical shielding of the test channels to minimize global electrical  artifacts.
Psi  researchers have been rather reluctant to accept Hasted's findings. In  part, this is because macro-pk effects remain very controversial. In  part, as enumerated by psi researcher John Palmer, it is because  Hasted's research procedures would benefit from additional refinements:
Even  if one grants the paranormal origins of the signals, Hasted's  methodology makes it difficult to draw valid conclusions about their  nature, including whether or not they truly represent strain. Use of an  inadequately fast chart recorder, failure to adopt proper principles of  experimental design, and failure to use statistical analyses are the  most serious problems. In particular, it is impossible to distinguish  basic physical characteristics of the phenomena from those correlated  with preferences, attitudes, etc., of the subject or experimenter.
In  general, "non-touching" is considered an essential prerequisite control  for a variety of possible conventional influences in PK metal-bending  research. However, some studies were conducted which allowed touching of  the target specimens and, yet, still merit some scientific  consideration. 
One  test used by Hasted employed a brittle alloy bar that supposedly could  not be bent to a particular angle of deformation in less than a certain  known time. 
Brittle alloy bars bent in Hasted's experiment
When  excessive force was applied it simply broke. The only way to bend it is  to apply a small force slowly over time, which produces bend by a  process known as creep. Hasted has reported bending of such alloys in  well under the minimum time thought to be possible using a creep  process.
Charles  Crussard and J. Bouvaist, two French metallurgists whose research was  funded by a metals company, took the following experimental measures in  PK studies with a magical performer, Jean-Paul Girard:
(1)  All dimensions of metal strips or rods were measured before and after  bending; (2) The microhardness of the metal was measured at several  points before and after bending; (3) Residual strain profiles (measures  of crystalline stucture) were examined; (4) Electron micrograph analyses  of the fine structure of ultrathin foil specimins were often made; (5)  Analyses of the chemical composition at various places along the strip  or rod were made. Additional precautions included consultations with  magicians, video recording of trials, and the marking of test specimens.
Crussard  and Bouvaist described eight of 20 trials conducted with Girard. The  specimens were bars of aluminum alloys, stainless steel cylinders, and  Duralumin plates. During the trials, Girard was allowed to touch and  hold the specimens, while at all times being observed by the  experimenters. Bending was observed in four of the specimens. Structural  changes inconsistent with physical bending were found for a stainless  steel cylinder and Duralumin plate. 
Since  Girard is a conjurer, researchers are cautious in interpreting the  above results. In his 1985 evaluation for the U.S. Army, psi researcher  John Palmer reached the following conclusion with regard to this report:
Only  in the case of the bending of one of the aluminum bars do the controls  as reported seem to completely rule out the possibility of Girard  substituting previously deformed specimens for the test specimens.  Nonetheless, the assumptions that must be made to explain away these  results seem rather farfetched.
Bio-PK
A number of studies are suggestive  of the possibility that conscious intention can influence the growth  and movement of biological targets. One of the first of these involved  the one-celled protozoan, paramecium. The organism was centered under  the cross hairs of a microscope, and it moved with significant frequency  into the randomly selected quadrant of the field. Water fleas observed  under a microscope turned in the randomly selected direction, i.e.,  either right or left, with greater frequency than these crustaceans  turned in the opposite direction. Significant results were also obtained  in mentally directing ants to carry away matches on the selected side  of a wooden slide. Carroll B. Nash conducted an experiment in which  bacterial growth was psychokinetically accelerated and retarded  according to the intentions of randomly selected college students.
Carroll B. Nash
In  two separate studies, the growth of fungus was less when an attempt was  made to mentally retard it than was the growth in the controls.,  Physicist Elizabeth Rauscher conducted a study with biochemist Beverly  Rubik in which bacteria exposed to an antibiotic grew more rapidly in a  sealed tube surrounded, but not touched, by the hands of psychic healer  Olga Worrall than in tubes not treated by her.  
  
Beverly Rubik  |    Elizabeth Rauscher  |   
(Further experimental work in the area of healing is reported in the section on potential applications of psi.)
In  a study following up on his earlier finding correlating students'  intentions with bacterial growth, Carroll B. Nash conducted another  study looking at mutation rates. He put suspensions of E. coli into nine  tubes, in a 3x3 arrangement, for each of 52 subjects. He randomly  designated one set for rapid mutation into another strain, one set for  inhibition of mutation rate, and one set for control. He arranged that  the subjects would know the instructions but the student experimenters  would be blind. The rapid mutation tubes showed significantly more  growth than the inhibition tubes. The promotion tubes had  nonsignificantly more growth than the controls; the inhibition tubes had  significantly less.
In  a computer automated study, Charles Pleass and N. Dean Dey, at the  University of Delaware, tried to have subjects use PK to speed or to  slow the swimming of algae. They measured swimming speed by the Doppler  effect of laser light, which does not affect algae adversely. Each  experimental run was preceded by a control run. A run consisted of the  collection of 1,000 data points and ordinarily took thirty seconds. Each  subject participated in ten runs. Data analysis showed differences in  speed, in the anticipated direction, between scores for PK and control  runs, and also indicated changes with the subject's mood and with  differences in the instructions. 
  
References
. Louisa E. Rhine, ESP in Life and Lab -- Tracing Hidden Channels. New York: Macmillan, 1967, pp. 166-168. 
. Joseph Banks Rhine, "Psychokinesis," in R. Cavandish (ed.), Man, Myth and Magic. New York: Marshall Cavandish, 1970, pp. 2285-2291. 
. Joseph Banks Rhine & Louisa E. Rhine, "The Psychokinetic Effect. l. The First Experiment," Journal of Parapsychology, 7, 1943, 2043. 
. Louisa E. Rhine, op. cit., p. 175. 
.  Helmut Schmidt, Robert L. Morris & Luther Rudolph. "Channeling Psi  Evidence to Critical Observers," in W. G. Roll, R. L. Morris & R. A.  White (eds.), Research in Parapsychology 1981. Metuchen,  NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1982, pp. 136-138. 
. Helmut Schmidt, Robert L. Morris & Luther Rudolph. "Chaneling Evidence for a PK Effect to Independent Observers," Journal of Parapsychology, 1986, 50, 1-16. 
. J. E. Alcock. A Comprehensive Review of Major Empirical Studies in Parapsychology Involving Random Event Generators or Remote Viewing. Washington, DC: National  Academy Press, 1988, pp. 99-102. 
.  According to a personal communication from Robert Morris, October 1989,  a replication of this study did not yield significant data. 
. Robert G. Jahn, Brenda J. Dunne & Roger D. Nelson, "Engineering Anomalies Research," Journal of Scientific Exploration,  1(1), 1987, 21-50. The researchers at the Princeton Engineering  Anomalies Research program have offered to make full details of the  design of this equipment available upon request. 
. Roger D. Nelson, Brenda J. Dunne, & Robert G. Jahn, An REG Experiment With Large Database Capability, III: Operator Related Anomalies  (Technical Note PEAR 84003. Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research).  Princeton, NJ: Princeton University School of Engineering/Applied  Science, 1984, p. 10. 
. Robert G. Jahn & Brenda Dunne, Margins of Reality: The Role of Consciousness in the Physical World. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987. As this research is ongoing, the database is growing.  
. Ibid., p. 25 
. John Palmer, An Evaluative Report.  
. James E. Alcock, A Comprehensive Review of Major Empirical Studies in Parapsychology Involving Random Event Generators or Remote Viewing. Washington, DC: National  Academy Press, 1988. 
. Roger D. Nelson, G. John Bradish & York H. Dobyns, Random Event Generator Qualification, Calibration, and Analysis. Technical Note PEAR 89001. Princeton, NJ: Princeton  University School of Engineering/Applied Sciences, 1989. 
.  In a personal communication, October 16, 1989, Brenda Dunne informed me  that several skeptics including James Randi and Phillip Klass have made  detailed inquiries about the experimental setup and have not, to her  knowledge, uncovered ways in which data-tampering could have occurred. 
. Brenda J. Dunne, Roger D. Nelson, Y. H. Dobyns & Robert G. Jahn, Individual Operator Contributions in Large Data Base Anomalies Experiments, Technical Note PEAR 88002. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University School of Engineering and Applied Science, 1988. 
. Brenda Dunne, personal communication, October 16, 1989. 
. Dean I. Radin & Roger D. Nelson. Replication in Random Event Generator Experiments: A Meta-Analysis and Quality Assessment (Technical Report 87001). Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Human Information Processing Group, 1987. 
.  For example, with a 10 hidden-node network, trained for 4,000 passes,  the difference between the mean number of correctly identified  individuals obtained with the transfer dataset versus the same mean  using the random dataset resulted in t(198 df) = 3.02; the t test  between the transfer dataset and scrambled dataset produced t = 4.01;  and the t test between the random and scrambled datasets was t = 0.98.  Other tests using different network configurations showed similar  results. See Dean I. Radin, "Searching for 'Signatures' in Human-Machine  Interaction Data: A Neural Network Approach," in Linda A. Henkel &  Rick E. Berger (eds.), Research in Parapsychology 1988. Metuchen,  NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1989. 
. Brenda J. Dunne, Roger D. Nelson & Robert G. Jahn, "Operator-Related Anomalies in a Random Mechanical Cascade," Journal of Scientific Exploration, 2(2), 1988, 155-179. 
.  Chen Hsin & Mai Lei, "Study of the Extraordinary Function of the  Human Body in China," in W. G. Roll, J. Beloff & R. White (eds.), Research in Parapsychology 1982. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow press, 1983. pp. 278-282. 
. L. L. Haft, "Abstracts of Chinese Reports on Parapsychology," European Journal of Parapsychology, 4, 1982, 399-402. 
.  Harold E. Puthoff, "Report on Investigations Into 'Exceptional Human  Body Function' in the People's Republic of China," in W. G. Roll, J.  Beloff & R. White (eds.), Research in Parapsychology 1982. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow press, 1983. pp. 275-278. 
. Chinese Academy of Sciences, "Exceptional Human Body Radiation," Psi Research, 1(2), 1982, 16-25. 
. Wu Xiaoping, "Report of a Chinese Psychic's Pill-Bottle Demonstration," Skeptical Inquirer, 13(2), Winter 1989, pp. 168-171. 
.  G. Scott Hubbard, Edwin C. May & Harold E. Puthoff, "Possible  Production of Photons During a Remote Viewing Task: Preliminary  Results," in D. H. Weiner & D. I. Radin (eds.), Research in Parapsychology 1985. Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1986. pp. 66-70. 
. John Hasted, The Metal Benders. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1980. 
. John Palmer, An Evaluative Report. 
. Hasted, op cit. 
.  Charles Crussard & J. Bouvaist, "Experiences Psychocinetiques Sur  Eprouvettes Metalliques [Psychokinetic Experiments with Metal Test  Samples]," Memoires Scientifiques de la Revue de Mettalurgie, 1978, 13-23. 
. Palmer, An Evaluative Report. 
. N.  Richmond, "Two Series of PK Tests on Paramedia," Journal of the American Society for Psychical Research, 46, 1952, 577-587. 
. L. Passidomo, "PK Effects on the Course Direction of Eurycereus, Lamaellatus, Eruycerine," New Realities, 1(1), 1977, 40-44. 
. Pierre Duval, "Exploratory Experiments with Ants," Journal of Parapsychology,  35, 1971, 58. This study was actually conducted by the famous French  biologist, Professor Remy Chauvin of the Sorbonne who often published  his psi research studies using the pseudonym of P. Duval. For an  overview of his perspective see Remy Chauvin, Parapsychology: When the Irrational Rejoins Science, trans. by K. M. Banham. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1985. 
. Carroll B.