Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Anomalistic Psychology
- Pseudoscience and Parapsychology
- Pseudoscience - masquerading as science
- Lacks falsifiability - hypotheses can't be disproved because they are
'jealous' phenomena.
- Lacks controlled, replicable research, e.g. Bem (2011) not replicated
- Lacks theory to explain phenomena, e.g. ESP
- Burden of proof misplaced on sceptic.
- Lacks ability to change explanations.
- If there are two competing explanations, simpler one is
to be preferred (Occam's razor) - paranormal
explanations are extremely convoluted.
- AO2
- Paranormal research is not the only pseudoscience -
some Freudian hypotheses also unfalsifiable.
- The AAAS accepted the Parapsychological Association as a member.
- Reasons to be concerned about paranormal research include: making money out of unfounded
claims, not asking for evidence.
- Scientific Fraud
- e.g. Uri Geller
- Methodological Issues
- ESP (Ganzfeld)
- Significant results could be due to other factors, e.g.
- Research bias - sheep-goat effect in receiver's elaborations
(Wooffitt, 2007).
- Expectations affect outcome of meta-analysis -
Honorton (1985) vs Hyman (1985).
- File-drawer effect - results of meta-analysis
change according to which studies are left out.
- Lack of control - lack of soundproofing and order of
presentation.
- EVALUATION *Positive results could be due to phenomena being
'jealous'.
- *Autoganzfeld improved control (e.g. random display of targets).
- *This still led to positive result by Honorton et al. (1990) but not Milton and
Wiseman (1999), although this was criticised by Bem et al. (2001).
- *Fraudulent research by Sargent still included in data; fraud may be a particular problem
in parapsychology.
- Psychokinesis
- Expectations created in study by Wiseman and Greening (2005), led to macro-PK reports.
- Lack of control - well-controlled studies show no effect (Hansel, 1989).
- Ecological validity - micro-PK may not represent paranormal action.
- EVALUATION *Quality of studies not related to positive results (Radin and Nelson, 2003), same findings from non-believers (Bosch et al., 2006).
- Bierman (2000) - steady decline in effect size over years, suggesting phenomena not real.
- Psychic Healing and Mediumship
- EXPLANATIONS
- Healing *Energy fields re-aligned by e.g. therapeutic touch. *Reduction of
anxiety through psychological support. *Placebo effect.
- EVALUATION *Lyvers et al. (2006) - no evidence for psychic healing, believers improved more. *No
placebo effect for prayers for cardiac recovery.
- Mediumship *Clues help medium produce accurate information without psychic ability (cold reading).
*Use of general statements (Barnum statements) and willingness of sitters to elaborate. *Fraud - psychic
mediumship is big business so people resort to complex and convincing strategies.
- EVALUATION *Sitters willing to be deceived. *Supported by mock
seance (Wiseman et al.)
- RESEARCH STUDIES
- Healing *Wirth (1990) - patients tested with TT or no touch -former recovered faster. *Rosa et al.
(1998) -TT practitioners unable to detect 'energy field' of experimenter's hand. *Cha et al. (2001) -
effect of prayer on infertile women, twice as many became pregnant.
- EVALUATION *Rosa et al. study invalid because experimenter not ill. *Study repeated (Long et al. 1999), results better than chance,
however this may be through heat detection. *Wirth's results haven't been replicated, and Wirth was subsequently convicted of
criminal fraud.
- Mediumship *Schwartz et al. (2001) - accuracy of medium
statements about 80%. *Rock and Beischel (2008)
- EVALUATION *O'Keeffe and Wiseman (2005) *Schwartz et al.
*Sheep-goat effect
- OOBE and NDE
- EXPLANATIONS
- OOBE *Paranormal - mind and body separated.
*Sensory input is disturbed, reconstruction
based on bird's eye view (Blackmore, 1982).
- EVALUATION *Alvardo (1982) found no evidence of parasomatic body having physically moved.
*Individual differences, e.g. OOBEs reported more often by believers and those prone to
fantasy.
- NDE *Endorphins released at time of stress, lead to feelings of euphoria and detachment (Carr, 1982).
*REM intrusions due to hypoxia disrupt integration of sensory information. *Hypoxia triggers a flood of
glutamate which is blocked by the brain to prevent neuronal death, leading to an NDE.
- EVALUATION *Likely to be a psychological component because NDEs not
experienced by all. *Cardiac survivors regarded NDE as a spiritual experience,
but this doesn't mean that spiritual factors cause NDEs.
- RESEARCH STUDIES
- OOBE *Green (1968) - 400 personal accounts of OOBEs, 20% 'parasomatic, rest 'aromatic'. *Use of
induced OOBEs (Alvarado, 1982) -weak but occasionally startling results. *Blanke et al. (2002) -
stimulation of temporal- parietal junction of the brain resulted in OOBEs.
- EVALUATION *Difficulty to study OOBEs scientifically because occur without predictability.
*Artificially-induced OOBEs not seen as equivalent. *Physiological explanations are reductionist.
- NDE *Ring (1980) - survivors describe NDE as peaceful and like a life review. *Nelson et al. (2006) - NDE
group more likely to experience REM intrusions.
- EVALUATION *Early studies poorly controlled. *Interviewer bias may affect
data collected.
- Coincidence and Probability
- Coincidence
- Illusion of causality & Illusion of
connection & Illusion of control & General
Cognitive ability
- EVALUATION *Type 1 errors and Type 2 errors. *Brugger et al - high levels of
dopamine *Illusion of control supported by Whitson and Galinsky
- Probability Judgement
- Paranormal experiences are a a cognitive illusion due to attributing cause to
random events (Blackmore and Troscianko) & Tested using repletion avoidance,
questions about probability etc.
- EVALUATION *Blackmore (1997) - no difference between sheep and goats on probability task. *Evidence shows belief is linked to probability misjudgement but not
necessarily a cause. *Probability misjudgement may be linked to low cognitive ability. *Probability misjudgement can alternatively be explained in terms of feeling to
understand heuristics, such as representativeness.
- Superstitious Behaviour and Magical Thinking
- Superstitious
- *Making erroneous casual links (Type 1 error) is adaptive. *Skinner (1947) - superstitions develop
when an accidental stimulus-response link is learned, and then maintained through negative
reinforcement (dual process). *Superstitions develop to give an illusion of control (Whitson and
Galinsky, 2008)
- EVALUATION *Skinner provided evidence from study of pigeons, who acquired superstitions. *Staddon and Simmelhag
repeated Skinner's experiment and found 'superstitious' behaviours unrelated to food reward. *Illusion of control increases
self efficacy.
- Magical Thinking
- *Fraud - a form of child-like thinking, a defence mechanism in adults. *Dual processing theory - thought is intuitive or
logical *Animism (Piaget) - association of objects with feelings *Nominal thinking - names of objects affect our feelings
about them *Law of contagion
- EVALUATION *Method used to measure paranormal beliefs affects correlations with personality
factors.*Wiseman and Watt (2004) found correlation with neuroticism only when negative beliefs of PBS
measured. *Evidence that psychoticism is linked to some paranormal beliefs (Francis et al.,2010). *Locus
of control - depends on type of paranormal belief, some correlate positively with externality, others
negatively. * Susceptibility might explain recollection of alien abductions (Clancy et al., 2002). *
paranormal experiences may be false beliefs, more common in susceptible people, supported by Fench
and Wilson (2006). * some evidence of link with mental disorder but more likely satisfies a need for
some people, e.g. abuse in childhood may leak to fantasy proneness and need for a greater sense of
control.
- Personality Factors in Anomalous Experience
- Eysenck's
- Neuroticism (defence mechanism) & Extraversion - People more open to paranormal
beliefs & Positive correlation with neuroticism (Williams et al) and with extraversion
(Honorton et al).
- EVALUATION *Wiseman and Watt found correlation with neuroticism only
when -ve beliefs of PBS measured.
- More imaginative
- Fantasy proneness - becoming so deeply absorbed in fantasy to believe it's
real & Suggestibility - more willing to believe fakes & Creative personalities
make links between unrelated items
- EVALUATION *Some evidence of link with mental disorder but more likely satisfies a need for some people,
e.g. abuse in childhood may lead to fantasy proneness and need for a greater sense of control.
- Locus of control & field dependence
- EVALUATION *Locus of control - depends on type of paranormal belief, some correlate positively with
externality, others negatively.