ADVANCED THREAT TECHNIQUE ASSESSMENT (U)

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CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4
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RIPPUB
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S
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98
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November 4, 2016
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September 5, 2003
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1
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Publication Date: 
October 1, 1978
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2003/09/09: C15RDU-918R001300040001-4 Final Report October 1978 ADVANCED THREAT. TECHNIQUE ASSESSMENT (U) By: HAROLD E. PUTHOFF RUSSELL TARG EDWIN C. MAY INGO SWANN Sensitive Intelligence Sources and Methods Involved 333 Ravenswood Avenue Menlo Park, California 94025 U.S.A. (415) 326-6200 Cable: SRI INTL MNP TWX: 910-373-1246 SECRET Not Releasable to Foreign Nationals Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09UD9s: IFa &-RDR -f93SEW1300040001-4 Final Report October 1978 Covering the Period 18 April 1977 to 15 April 1978 ADVANCED THREAT TECHNIQUE ASSESSMENT (U) By: HAROLD E. PUTHOFF RUSSELL TARG Radio Physics Laboratory EDWIN C. MAY INGO SWANN Consultants Sensitive Intelligence Sources and Methods Involved ROBERT S. LEONARD, Director Radio Physics Laboratory DAVID D. ELLIOTT, Executive Director Systems Research and Analysis Division Copy No. ....23 This document consists of 132 pages. SRI 8-4566 CLASSIFIED BY: DIA (DT) NATIONAL SECURITY INFORMATION EXEMPT FROM GDS OF E. O. 11652 EXEMPTION CATEGORY: 2 Unauthorized Disclosure Subject DECLASSIFIED ON: Notification of Originator to Criminal Sanctions 333 Ravenswood Avenue ? Menlo Park, California 94025 U.S.A. (415) 326-6200 ? Cable: SRI INTL MNP ? TWX: 910-373-1246 SECRET Not Releasable to Foreign Nationals (This Page is UNCLASSIFIED) Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/05FcE196-00788RO01300040001-4 CONTENTS (U) SG1A LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v LIST OF TABLES (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii I OBJECTIVE (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 II EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 A. Definition (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B. Psychoenergetic Processes (U) . . . . . . . . . . . C. SRI Work (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1. Advances of the Current Contract Period (U) . . b. Example: Communication with a Submerged Submarine via the Remote-Viewing SG1A Channel (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . c. Example: Resolution Studies (Objects Hidden in Metal Containers) (U) . . . . . 12 2. Remote-Viewing State of the Art (U) . . . . . . 12 III LONG-DISTANCE COORDINATE REMOTE-VIEWING EXPERIMENTS (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A. Introduction (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IV LONG-DISTANCE REMOTE VIEWING FROM A SUBMERSIBLE (U) . . . A. Communication Experiment (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . B. Examination of the ELF Hypothesis (U) . . . . . . . C. Preliminary Conclusions (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . SECRET 17 17 33 33 39 39 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele~ew2~0~/L A S S I F I E D 07888001300040001-4 V REMOTE VIEWING OF OBJECTS, PICTURES, AND SYMBOLS (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 A. Experiments with objects in Metal Containers (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 B. Abstract Targeting of Building Interiors (U) . . . . 48 C. Experiments with Analytical Targets (U) . . . . . . 50 1. Alphanumeric Targets (U) . . . . . . . . . . . 51 2. Color/Shape Targets (Parallels Between Remote Perception and Ordinary Perception) (U) . . . . 51 VI ROLE OF FEEDBACK IN REMOTE VIEWING EXPERIMENTS (U) . . . 55 A. Background Discussion (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 B. Experimentation (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 C. Conclusions (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 1. General (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 2. Recent Results (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 VII REMOTE PERCEPTION OF AUDIO SIGNALS (U) . . . . . . . . . 61 VIII SUBJECT-INDUCED EQUIPMENT PERTURBATION EFFECTS (U) . . . 65 A. Strain-Gauge Experiments (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 B. Random-Event Generator Experiments (U) . . . . . . . 66 IX SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 APPENDICES (U) A STANDARD REMOTE-VIEWING PROTOCOL (LOCAL TARGETS) (U) . . 77 B SUMMARY OF KEY EXPERIMENTS IN LONG-DISTANCE COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING GENERATED FOR THIS PROGRAM DURING PREVIOUS YEAR (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 C DATA-SOURCE TRANSCRIPT (COMPLETE) (U) . . . . . . . . . . 107 D ERROR-CORRECTING CODING AND THE REMOTE VIEWING OF TARGET SITES AS A MESSAGE-SENDING MEDIUM (U) . . . . . . 115 REFERENCES (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/0$to"f l 96-00788R001300040001-4 ILLUSTRATIONS (U) SG1A Target Objects in Metal Containers (U) . . . . . . . . . . 10 Submersible Taurus (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Submersible Experiment Number 1: 170 Meters Deep in 340 Meters of Water. 16 July 1977 (U) . . . . . . . . . . 36 12 Shopping Mall Target Used in Submersible Experiment Number 2 (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 13 Submersible Experiment Number 2: 78 Meters Deep, on the Bottom (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Palo Alto Airport Tower Target (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Remote Viewing by Grographical Coordinates of Dam Site in the USSR (S) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 B-6 Remote-Viewing Overview of Dam-Site Locale, Showing Airport of Interest in the Lower Left (U) . . . . . . . . 102 B-7 Remote-Viewing Sketch of Detail on Runways and Structures (Soviet Airport) (S) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SECRET B-8 Rural Soviet Site (S) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 D-1 Use of a 5-Bit Error-Correcting Code to Increase Probability of Correct Message Reception (U) . . . . . . 120 SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/090 96-00788R001300040001-4 SCRfIr TABLES (U) SG1A Breakdown of the Various Psychoenergetic Processes (U) . . Action Item Areas for Research in Psychoenergetics (U) . . SG1A 47 62 Packets Associated with Each Target for Series 1 (U) . . . 64 10 Distribution of Rankings Assigned to Subject Response Packets Associated with Each Target for Series 2 (U) . . . 64 11 Remote-Viewing State of the Art--Conclusions (U) . . . . . 71 A-1 Direct Matching (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 A-2 Rank-Ordering Table (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 D-1 Quantitative Judging Technique (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . 118 D-2 A 5-Bit Decoding Matrix (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119 Message Set (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Submarine Experiment (U) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Distribution of Rankings Assigned to Subject Response Packets Associated with Each Target (U) . . . . . . . . . 8 Music Target Pool with Partial Attribute List (U) . . . . 9 Distribution of Rankings Assigned to Subject Response SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release Wt. M P96-00788RO01300040001-4 I OBJECTIVE (U) (S) The purpose of this program was to provide a basis for assess- ing psychoenergetic processes as an advanced threat technology that could be in development by the USSR. Psychoenergetic processes (1) The acquisition and description, by mental means, of information blocked from ordinary perception by distance or shielding and generally believed to be secure against such access. (2) The production of physical effects such as the perturbation of equipment or instrumentation that appears to be well shielded against, or otherwise inaccessible to, human influence. (S) This study was undertaken to determine-the state of the art, to identify key development trends and technical parameters, and to provide indicators that suggest particular advanced-threat-related applications. (U) There has been no attempt in this program to emphasize basic research, nor to attempt development of specific applications. Further- more, since funding levels were limited, extensive proof of the phenomena under study was not intended. However, basic evaluation guidelines were established as an aid in forming judgements on the apparent degree of success, or lack of success, of the various types of investigations. Some investigations were more amenable to (C) Evidence that such development is takin place is documented in a series of intelligence community documents,- 6fi and attention has been called to this area by the U.S. Intelligence Board's (USIB) Scientific and Technical Intelligence Committee (STIC) in a document entitled "Views on Emerging Areas of Science and Technology Potentially Important to National Security (C)."7 t(U) References are listed at the end of this document. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 2Q03/078880 01300040001-4 Approved For ReleUNCLASSIFIED (U) statistical verification; others involved subjective as well as objec- tive judgements. There is generally a lack of agreement as to what constitutes sufficient proof of a particular paranormal phenomena, and this effort did not attempt to develop specific tasks to provide proof of such phenomena which would be satisfactory to all readers. However, insights gained from these investigations are considered to be of value in evaluating potential gains as well as potential difficulties that could be experienced by possible Warsaw Pact development in this area. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/051F TP96-00788 R001300040001-4 %0 9% II EXECUTIVE SUMMARY (U) A. Definition (U) (U) Recent publications in both the open and classified literature provide mounting evidence for the existence of so-called "parapsycho- logical," "paraphysical," or "psychoenergetic" processes. These processes include: (1) The acquisition of information not presented to any obvious sense. These are perceptual processes that act as information input to a human subject (remote viewing, telepathy, dowsing, etc.). (2) The production of physical effects not mediated by any obvious mechanism. These are perturbation (psychokinetic) processes that act as action output from a human subject (the generation of fields, temperature changes, mechanical forces, physiological effects, etc.). B. Psychoenergetic Processes (U) (U) A breakdown of the various psychoenergetic processes of interest is shown in Table 1. A matrix or "road map" of the various areas under current investigation in our laboratory and elsewhere is shown in Table 2. Its structure reflects the three major areas of activity: ? Cataloging the characteristics of the phenomenon, such as resolution, reliability, bit rate, effects of shielding, etc., including investigation of various models (e.g., electromagnetic). ? Ascertaining the correlates of paranormal functioning that may lead to screening and training (psychological conditions, medical profiling, environmental factors, etc.). ? Determining application potential with regard to: alternate communications systems, enhanced environmental monitoring (near and far), application to information security processes, enhanced man/machine interactions, etc. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 (U) BREAKDOWN OF THE VARIOUS PSYCHOENERGETIC PROCESSES (U) PERCEPTUAL PROCESSES (Information Input) SPATIAL (Remote Viewing) TEMPORAL (Precognition, Retrocognition) MODIFICATION PERTURBATION, HEALING REMOTE REMOTE I I BEHAVIOR PHYSIOLOGICAL CLASSICAL NOISE DISTRIBUTION TELEPATHY MEDICAL CLAIRVOYANCE, PSYCHOMETRY (Electronic Noise, DIAGNOSIS DOWSING (Temporal History) Brownian Motion, etc.) QUANTUM -J MECHANICAL STATISTICAL DISTRIBUTION (Radioactive Decay, Zero-Point Fluctuations, etc.) PERTURBATION PROCESSES (Action Output) MECHANICAL FORCES FIELD GENERATION (Electric, Magnetic Gravitational, etc.) C z Ir M v Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 UNCLASSIFIED INFORMATION THEORY, CODING (Bit Rate, Redundancy Required, Message Transmission, Judging Techniques) ORDINARY PERCEPTION (Perceptual Tasks Paralleling Ordinary Perception) SPATIAL AND TEMPORAL RESOLUTION (Target Size, Repetition Rate, Targets in Motion) RELIABILITY (Subject Confidence, Coding Enhancement) EXPERIMENTS NOISE PERTUR PHYSIOLOGICAL CORRELATES (EEG, GSR, EMG) BATION (Radioactive Decay, Electronic Noise) Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Table 2 ELECTROMAGNETIC QUANTUM MECHANICS MULTI-DIMENSIONAL EFFECTS (Non-locality, Quantum- (Complex Space/Time) (ELF Beacons, Jamming, I nterconnectedness, Submersible Shielding, Holographic) Propagation Velocity) TARGETING (Geographic Coordinates, Biographical Histories, Target Agent, Electronic Information Storage) SHIELDING ROLE OF ROLE OF (Electromagnetic CONSCIOUSNESS FEEDBACK and Other) (Computer-Controlled (Psychological and Scored Versus Factors, Human-Mediated Precognitive Experiments) Mechanisms) PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGICAL CORRELATES PSYCHOLOGICAL, MEDICAL PROFILING ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS (Sensory Deprivation, Altered States, Stress Environments, Experimenter Effects [Psychological Factors, Psi/Anti-psi Syndrome]) Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 EDUCATIONAL PROCEDURES SCREENING (Children Identical Twins, the Blind) TRAINING (Feedback, Reinforcement, Target Optimization) APPLICATION POTENTIAL ENHANCED ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION MONITORING ALTERNATE COMMUNICATIONS CAPABILITIES GENERATION OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SECURITY PROCESSES ENHANCED HUMAN/MACHINE INTERACTIONS CREATION OF NEW INDUSTRIAL COMPONENTS r NEW APPLICATIONS IN SYSTEMS TECHNOLOGY AND ENERGY ECONOMICS POTENTIAL APPLICATIONS TO SATELLITE AND INTERPLANETARY COMMUNICATIONS ALTERNATE MEDICAL/ PSYCHOLOGICAL TREAT- MENT STRATEGIES PRODUCTION OF NEW EDUCATIONAL METHODS UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SECRET C. SRI Work (U) (U) In order to meet the objectives of this program, SRI investi- gators have for the last six years been concentrating primarily on a particular human information-accessing capability that we call "remote viewing." This phenomenon pertains to the ability of certain individuals to access and describe, by means of mental processes, information blocked from ordinary perception by distance or shielding, and generally believed to be secure against such access. This has included the ability of sub- jects to view remote geographical locations, even at intercontinental distances, given only geographical coordinates or a known person on whom to target. (S) The remote viewing abilities of several subjects have been developed to the point where they can describe--often in great detail-- geographical and technical material such as natural formations, roads, buildings, interior laboratory apparatus, and real-time activities. 1. Advances of the Current Contract Period (U) (U) Three major advances stand out in this year's effort with regard to work with our two experienced subjects. They are: (1) An observed increase in reliability of psychoenergetic functioning as a result of practice, to the point where the year's major effort in a long-distance remote viewing application resulted in data of high information content with little error. (2) The successful application of the remote viewing function as a communications (message-sending) medium, carried out in a semi-operational stress environment (submerged submarine). (3) An observed increase in spatial resolution discri- mination, to resolution on the order of a millimeter. These advances are illustrated in the following three examples. SECRET SG1 A Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SG1A L Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SG1A Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SECRET b. Example: Communication with a Submerged Submarine via the Remote-Viewing Channel (U) (U) As an example of remote viewing applied in a communication mode, we present here a synopsis of a second experiment described in further detail in Section IV. (U) The goal of the experiment was to determine whether it was possible to transmit a message to a submerged submarine via the remote- viewing channel. The test was designed to provide not only an oppor- tunity to determine the feasibility of psychoenergetic communication with an isolated individual, but also to provide data on the effects of environmental stress on psychoenergetic performance, and on the possible shielding effects of several hundred feet of sea water (known to be a good shield for all but the lowest frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum). (U) As an overall calibration of the remote viewing process, against which specific examples such as the above can be gauged, we can take as a background data base a lengthy collection of 51 remote viewing trials collected over a several-year period with nine subjects, and published by the authors in Proc. IEEE.9 In these trials subjects were targeted on local targets (bridges, swimming pools, theaters, airports, computers, machine shops, etc.) within a 20 km range of SRI. The method of targeting was that the subject "tracked" investigators who were to visit an unknown target site at a prearranged time. The proto- col for this standard remote-viewing experiment is given in Appendix A. The quality of the results was such that the judges, who had to determine in a blind fashion which subject-generated data packages (tape transcripts and drawings) were associated with which target sites, were able to blind-match transcripts to targets in roughly half the cases. Details are presented in Ref. 9. (U) Further calibration data are given in Appendix B. Presented there are key experiments in long-distance coordinate remote viewing generated for this program during the previous year. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SECRET (U) The submersible used in the experiment was the Taurus, a five- man underwater vehicle manufactured by International Hydrodynamics Company Ltd. (HYCO) of Canada. During the experimentation discussed here, the submersible operated submerged in the waters near Santa Catalina Island, off the coast of southern California. (U) The protocol for the experiment was as follows. A series of six potential messages to be sent (see Table 4) was constructed in advance of the experiment. To each message was assigned a San Francisco Bay Area target location. To send a given message, a pair of investi- gators comprising a target demarcation team went at a prearranged time to the site linked to the particular message and remained there for 15 minutes. During this period a subject on-board the submersible, monitored by an investigator blind to the target pool, registered his impressions as to where the demarcation team was, 500 miles away, as per standard remote viewing protocol. Following the remote-viewing trial, the subject then consulted a list of potential targets (seen for the first time at this point), made a choice as to which target of the set he had described, and noted the associated message. (S) MESSAGE SET (U) Remain submerged for two days Evasive plan six -Rendezvous at pickup point three Proceed to base one Standby alert on priority targets *Launch priority targets Messages sent via remote-viewing protocol. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200-1,(M U161 - DP96-00788R001300040001-4 (U) Two experiments of this type were carried out, one each with two subjects. For this first experiment the submersible was at a depth of 170 m in water 340 m deep; for the second the submersible rested on the bottom in 80 m of water. In both cases the subjects rendered excellent descriptions of the target sites, and had no difficulty in choosing the correct target from the Although the subjects indicated that stress due to cramped conditions and factors did not appear to affect the list of six potentials targets. they had experienced some degree of seasickness, these environmental quality of performance deleteriously. c. Example: Resolution Studies (Objects Hidden in Metal Containers) (U) (U) In order to obtain an estimate of the resolution capability of the remote-viewing process, a subject was asked to render descriptions of objects hidden in small light-tight metal containers (35 mm film cans) located 1/8 mile distant from the subject. The location of the object was known to the subject only as being on the person of an investigator outbound to an unknown site. During the experiment no investigator involved in the study knew the target, the target canisters having been previously prepared and randomized by an investigator outside the project. (U) A sequence of ten trials were carried out, and the resulting subject transcripts and drawings were blind-matched to the targets by an independent judge with statistically significant results. Figure 1 shows the targets and responses for the first five trials. As indicated in the figure caption, the quotations accompanying the drawings are taken from the first paragraphs of the subject responses. These data indicate that the psychoenergetic channel functions with a spatial resolution down to at least the order of one millimeter. 2. Remote-Viewing State of the Art (U) (S) The more important results of our investigation to date can be summarized as follows: SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaU 1ODCOLA.%FD&EGb788R001300040001-4 "IT'S DEFINITELY SOMETHING THIN AND SPOOL AND PIN LONG. . . WITH A NAIL HEAD AT THE END . . . SILVERED COLORED." CURLED UP LEAF "A NAUTILUS SHAPE WITH A TAIL." ti I 1 LEATHER BELT KEYRING "THE STRONGEST IMAGE I GET IS LIKE A BELT." "LIKE A MINIATURE TOWER . . . SCALLOPED CAN OF SAND BOTTOM . . . LIGHT BEIGE," .;3 f t~ "LIKE A PENGUIN GREY AND BLACK AND WHITE . . . POINTED OR SLIGHTLY ROUNDED GREY AND WHITE QUILL OFF AT THE TOP . . . OPEN OR POINTED AT THE BOTTOM." FIGURE 1 TARGET OBJECTS IN METAL CONTAINERS. Captions under subject drawings are quotes from first paragraph of transcript. (U) UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200 Q9/~pC RDP96-00788ROO1300040001-4 (S) ? Target acquisition--Subjects can acquire target site on the basis of the presence of a known person at the site; targeting by geographical coordinates without the presence of a known person at the site yields results comparable to those obtained in experiments in which a person known to the subject is used as a target. This observation offers evidence for goal-oriented as opposed to means-oriented interpretation of the "laws" that appear to govern psychoenergetic functioning. ? Target attributes sensed--Descriptive aspects (shape, form, color, material) are described better than analytical concepts (function, name), although at times the latter come through excellently. Written target material is correct only occasionally. Alphabet targets are success- ful only statistically. In addition to visually observable detail, subjects sometimes report sounds, smells, electro- magnetic fields, and other phenomena that can be verified as existing at target locations. ? Spatial and temporal resolution--The channel functions with spatial resolution down to at least one millimeter. Real- time activities at the target site are often perceived. Experiments have included successful real-time remote viewing of Minuteman and Poseidon static test firings in the western United States (with differentiation between successful firings and scrubs, and timing to within ten seconds). Ephemeral, rapid, or repetitive targets are more difficult. ? Distance effects--Accuracy and resolution are not sensitive functions of subject-target distance over intercontinental distances. ? Shielding--Faraday cage or sea water electrical shielding are not effective shields. ? Factors that appear to inhibit success in remote viewing-- These are a-priori subject knowledge of target possibili- ties, absence of feedback, application of the ability to trivial tasks (testing for the sake of testing), and use of repetitive target sequences. ? Factors that appear to enhance success in remote viewing-- These are interest factors for the subject, a-priori necessity and relevancy for obtaining information (seriousness of purpose), the presence of a facilitating monitor to ask questions and direct the subject's attention, and practice with feedback. ? Accuracy and reliability--Analysis of remote-viewing tran- scripts generated by experienced subjects indicates that for a given target site roughly two-thirds of the subject- generated material constitutes an accurate description of SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/0~QA fir96-00788 R001300040001-4 (S) the site, while about one-third is ambiguous, general, or incorrect. Repeatability of phenomena--Continuing demonstrations in this program, and replications in other laboratories,14_19 indicate that the capability known as "remote viewing" is a repeatable human perceptual ability. ? Distribution of psychoenergetic capacity in population-- Abilities appear widespread, though latent; volunteers with no previous history of psychoenergetic functioning exhibit ability in screening experiments, indicating that reliance on the availability of special subjects may not be necessary. Unknown, however, are the percentage of population trainable or with natural talent, the optimum screening procedures, and the medical or psychological profiles of good subjects. ? Threat potential--Remote viewing, through the use of geographical coordinates as designators, has in many cases provided meaningful descriptions of East-Bloc military facilities designated as targets by the sponsor; evaluation by appropriate intelligence community specialists indicates that a subject is able by this process to generate useful data corroborated by other intelligence data; as is generally true with human sources, the information is fragmentary and imperfect, and is therefore best utilized in conjunction with these other resources; nonetheless, the data generated by this process appears to exceed any reasonable bounds of chance correlation or acquisition by ordinary means, and therefore constitutes a potentially exploitable information source. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/(S/K. P96-00788R001300040001-4 III LONG-DISTANCE COORDINATE REMOTE-VIEWING EXPERIMENTS (U) SG1A A. Introduction (U) (S) One of the primary objectives of this program is to provide a basis for evaluating various psychoenergetic capabilities. This is done specifically to assess the probability that such capabilities might be under development in the USSR as an advanced threat technique that could form the basis of future technological surprise. (S) To aid in this assessment a significant part of the study is devoted to evaluating application feasibility by examining U.S. capabili- ties. This assessment of application feasibility takes the form of our asking subjects in this program to view and describe remote sites chosen by the project's contract monitor as being sites of interest,II (U) Two procedures are used for targeting the subject on the site. In those cases where feasible, a person known to the subject is dispatched to the vicinity of the site and the subject is asked to target on that individual, who plays the role of a beacon--i.e., apparently acts as an aid in the focusing process. For those sites where deployment of a cooperative person to the site is not feasible, we employ an abstract targeting procedure developed in an earlier program.10 In this procedure the site coordinates (latitude and longitude in degrees, minutes, and seconds) are relayed with no further information to the subject. The subject who is to view the site is asked simply to proceed on the basis of the coordinate alone. The materials generated in the experiment are then turned over to the project monitor for evaluation. (U) Admittedly, such an abstract targeting procedure seems without basis in logic (at least with regard to the present scientific paradigm), and we can make no claim for the technique other than the purely pragmatic one that it appears to work. We can only point out that in psychoener- getics research in general, the possibility of success in such an SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200 /r fDP96-00788R001300040001-4 1% am I (U) experiment is in accord with the observed "goal-oriented" nature of the S G1A laws that appear to govern such functioning. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SG1A L Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Next 12 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleasdJN4DLOASM tECD88R001300040001-4 IV LONG-DISTANCE REMOTE VIEWING FROM A SUBMERSIBLE In July of 1977 SRI carried out experiments in remote viewing from a submersible submerged in 500 ft of sea water, approximately 500 miles from the target site. The goal of the experiment was to determine whether it was possible to transmit a message to a submerged submarine via the remote-viewing channel. The test was designed to provide not only an opportunity to determine the feasibility of psychoenergetic communication with an isolated individual, but also to provide data on the effects of environ- mental stress on psychoenergetic performance, and on the possible shielding effects of several hundred feet of sea water (known to be a good shield for all but the lowest frequencies of the electromagnetic spectrum). Neither the stress, nor distance, nor seawater attenuation appeared to degrade the quality of the remote-viewing function in any way. The submersible used in the experiment was the Taurus, a five-man underwater vehicle (see Figure 10) manufactured by International Hydrodynamics Company Ltd. (HYCO) of Canada. (The Taurus was made available to SRI by Mr. Stephan Schwartz of the Philosophical Research Society of Los Angeles, who had arranged for its use in'an underwater archaeology experiment.) During the experimentation discussed here, the submersible operated submerged in the waters near Santa Catalina Island, off the coast of southern California. A. Communication Experiment The protocol for the experiment was as follows. A series of six potential messages to be sent [see Table 4 in the Executive Summary (Section II)] was constructed in advance of the experiment. To each message was assigned a target location in the San Francisco Bay Area. To send a given message, a target demarcation team went at a prearranged UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release ff ffA. gtF"ff88ROO1300040001-4 (b) SECTIONAL VIEW (U) FIGURE 10 SUBMERSIBLE TAURUS (U) 34 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaslJ(Nv fA( S I 88RO01300040001-4 time to the site linked to the particular message and remained there for 15 minutes. During this period a subject on-board the submersible, monitored by an investigator blind to the target pool, registered his impressions as to:where the demarcation team was, 500 miles away, as per standard remote viewing protocol. Following the remote-viewing trial, the subject then consulted a list of potential targets (seen for the first time at this point), made a choice as to which target of the set was viewed, and noted the associated message. Four trials were planned in accordance with a prearranged time schedule. The first trial was aborted because the submersible did not follow its diving schedule. For the second trial the submersible was at a depth of 170 m, in water 340 m deep, and the subject was asked to describe his impressions of the location of the outbound team. (The outbound team had chosen their location to designate the particular message to be sent.) Having completed the response, the subject was handed the list of target descriptions and asked to choose which of the six target locations appeared to match the description. Figure 11 shows the subject's response. The outbound team had chosen the large oak tree shown in the figure. (An interesting note: Because of a timing error the subject's narrative began while the out- bound team was still enroute to the target site.) The subject correctly (and extensively) described a large tree, and also correctly described a drop-off behind the outbound team. In this experiment the subject was able to identify the correct target on the list and was thus able to obtain the associated correct message, "Rendezvous at Pickup Point Three." The third trial aborted because of a lack of synchronization between submarine dives and target visitation. For the fourth trial, the out- bound team again went at a prearranged time to one of six possible locations, chosen from a new list, a shopping mall shown in Figure 12. In this trial the submersible rested on the bottom in 78 meters of water. Figure 13 shows the subject's response to the target. The subject correctly indicated the flat stone flooring, small pool, reddish stone UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 M v Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 FIGURE 11 SUBMERSIBLE EXPERIMENT NUMBER 1: 170 m DEEP IN 340 m OF WATER. 16 July 1977. Target was a giant oak on a hilltop in Portola Valley, California. Subject's first words were: "A very tall looming object. A very, very, huge tall tree and a lot of space behind them. There almost feels like there is a drop-off or a palisade or a cliff behind them." (U) Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 1 0 Approved For Release 2tjf09L."jV;fE UR001300040001-4 37 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 L^,-- -- __y WC-A C z FIGURE 13 SUBMERSIBLE EXPERIMENT NUMBER 2: 78 m DEEP ON THE BOTTOM. Target was shopping mall in Mountain View, California. Subject's drawing correctly identifies: "Flat stone flooring, walls, small pool, reddish stone walk, large doors, walking around, an enclosed space." (U) N Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release ~2AQ3~0~/Q9wCffiEQ.~88R001300040001-4 walk, and people walking around in an enclosed space. When shown the target list, the subject chose the correct target location and was thus able to "receive" the associated message. Therefore, in the two trials that were actually carried out from the submersible, the subject in each case selected the correct one out of six messages. B. Examination of the ELF Hypothesis One of our purposes in experimenting with remote viewing from a submersible was to test the extremely-low-frequency (ELF) electromagnetic hypothesis put forward by I. M. Kogan of the Soviet Union, who suggests that information transfer under conditions of sensory shielding is mediated by ELF waves with wavelengths in the 300-to-1000-km region. 20-23 To determine the significance of the success of the communications experiment with regard to the ELF hypothesis, we must examine the shielding effect of 170 m of sea water. The appropriate calculations have been carried out by the authors for another project; we quote the salient features here. Three modes of propagation have to be considered. They are the TE, TM, and quasi-TIN modes of propagation. (The latter is generally assumed in Project Sanguine/Seafarer calculations, where one considers coupling into the spherical resonant cavity comprised of the earth's surface as the inner radius, and the ionosphere as the outer radius.24) Table 6 shows the minimum attenuation results for the three cases, assuming a depth of 170 m and a frequency of 10 Hz (approximate brainwave frequency). We see that in all cases there is greater than 20 dB (factor of 100) attenuation of a 10-Hz ELF signal. C. Preliminary Conclusions Preliminary conclusions of the submersible experiment are as follows: 39 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 UNCLASSIFIED SUBMARINE EXPERIMENT (ELF Hypothesis) Depth: 170 m Maximum-Transmission TE Wave (Normal Incidence, 10 Hz) R surface loss R attn Maximum-Transmission TM Wave (Grazing Incidence, 10 Hz) R surface loss R attn Maximum-Transmission Quasi-TEM Wave (Grazing Incidence, 10 Hz) R surface loss R attn ? Remote viewing appears to be a successful approach for achieving a land/submersible communication link. ? Under the least-loss case (near-grazing TM wave), the attenuation for an ELF signal at 10 Hz is 18.6 dB at 170 m, to which must be added the air/surface reflection loss. (The air/surface interface adds another 3.4 dB.) The results are therefore suggestive that the postulated ELF electromagnetic radiation mechanism is not viable as a mechanism for remote viewing. However, a definitive test requires a series UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release P)qa/t9AgtFE 38R001300040001-4 of experiments carried out at, say, 1000 m, where 10-Hz attenuation reaches 110 dB. ? Although the subjects indicated that they had experienced some degree of stress due to cramped conditions and seasickness, these environmental factors did not appear to affect the quality of performance deleteriously. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200310 a ty 96-00788RO01300040001-4 V REMOTE VIEWING OF OBJECTS, PICTURES, AND SYMBOLS (U) (U) For simple communication experiments, training procedures, and so forth, it would be desirable to dispense with the relatively cumber- some procedure of remote viewing of natural sites and substitute the remote viewing of small objects, pictures, symbols, and the like. In this section we discuss experiments undertaken to determine the feasi- bility of such a substitution. A. Experiments with Objects in Metal Containers (U) (U) An experiment was carried out in which a subject was asked to render descriptions of objects hidden in small light-tight metal con- tainers (35-mm film cans) located 1/8 mile distant from the subject's location. Further, the location of the object was known to the subject only as being on the person of an investigator outbound to an unknown site. (S) The purpose of the experiment was to test (1) whether such a process constitutes a useful communication channel as claimed by the Soviets,22 (2) whether a target needs to be illuminated in order to be detected by psychoenergetic processes (e.g., can one look inside a darkened safe?), and (3) whether resolution on the order of millimeters can be obtained. (U) Ten trials were carried out. Each target was chosen by a random-number process from the target pool that was prepared in advance by an independent investigator. All investigators involved in carrying out the experiment were kept blind both as to particular targets and as to the contents of the target pool as a whole. (U) In detail, an investigator not otherwise associated with this series (Investigator A) was asked to select ten objects and to seal each in a separate film can. The film cans were then turned over to a second SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 07888001300040001-4 w; 03/0 9 Approved For ReleUNCLASSIFIED (U) investigator (Investigator B), who was not told the contents. Investi- gator B then numbered the can tops 1 to 10 without opening the cans, taking care to handle them in such a way as to avoid gaining any information as to their contents. Investigator B then placed the box of cans in a secure safe. During the experiment the target cans were used without replacement until the ten possibilities were exhausted. (U) At the beginning of each experiment, the subject was closeted with Investigator C in an isolated windowless room of the Radio Physics Laboratory in the SRI complex. Investigator B then generated a random number by the use of the random-number function on a Texas Instruments Model SR-51 hand calculator, obtained the associated can from the target pool in the safe," and took it to a convenient location in a park near SRI. The outbound investigator (Investigator B) remained at the remote location for a ten-minute target period, beginning at a previously agreed-upon time, with the film can still unopened. (U) During the target period the subject was asked to locate the outbound investigator and to describe the contents of the film can in his possession. Since the investigator with the subject (Investigator C) was ignorant of both the particular target and the contents of the target pool, he was free to question the subject about his perceptions without fear of cueing. The entire interaction in the laboratory was tape recorded, and the subject was encouraged to make drawings to accompany his verbal description of the film-can contents. (U) Following the target period, outbound Investigator B returned to the laboratory, at which time all concerned (subject and Investigators B and C) learned the contents of the target film can by opening it. This was the first time in the entire course of the experiment that an association could be made between a numbered can top and a given target object. (U) Because targets were used without replacement, when a previously used number came up, the random-number generator was reactivated until an unused number was obtained. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 y8R001300040001-4 Approved For Releasetffiffr&?F F1 t P-qA (U) To facilitate analysis, it was decided in advance that the experimental series of ten trials would be broken down into two sub- groups of five trials each. Thus, in the blind rank-order procedure used (described below), a judge was asked to compare each target against five transcripts--one generated during the target period of interest and four generated during the other tar-get periods of the subgroup. This procedure of breaking up trials into subgroups is a standard one designed to reduce the difficulty of comparing each target against a long series of all transcripts. (U) In preparation for the judging of each subgroup, the subject's tapes were transcribed. The resulting transcripts were then edited by Investigator B only to the extent of deleting references to previous days' targets. The transcripts were then labeled A. B, C, D, E in a random order by use of the SR-51 random number generator. Each set of five transcripts (with associated drawings) was then turned over to an independent judge with the following instructions: "The five film cans with randomly numbered tops which contain objects constituted targets in five successive 'remote viewing' experiments. The subject's five response packets containing tape transcripts and associated drawings, one packet for each experiment, are to be matched to the film can contents. The response packets are unnumbered and presented in random order, so the matching is of the blind type; that is, no indication is being given as to which packet was generated in response to which target. In carrying out the matching process, the judge must realize that the subject is instructed simply to give descriptive impressions as to the characteristics of a target, as opposed to trying to interpret or identify or name the target. This is based on the known fact that in psychoenergetic functioning, as in other subliminal perception processes, first impressions as to form, color, and texture tend to be correct, but further efforts to analyze and interpret tend to lead to incorrect 'analytical overlay.' As an aid in judging with regard to this particular concept, we ask that as part of the judging exercise the judge should, before reading any subject transcript, examine all the targets, and write down for his own use a list of target descriptors (rather than names) for each item. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele~s Ke/Q9/Q9S IP9bOO788ROOl300040001-4 (U) The details of the judging procedure, which involve * filling in the accompanying matrix (see attached form), are as follows. Select the lowest numbered can and examine its contents. Then read through the packets with the goal of determining best to worst description of this particular target. When the rank ordering is complete for this target, enter the rank order numbers, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, best to worst match, beside the appropriate transcript letter in the first column. Then examine the contents of the next lowest numbered can, again ranking the packets best to worst match, and likewise enter the rank order numbers, 1-5, best to worst match, beside the appropriate transcript letter in the second column, and so on. The rank ordering for each target is to be done independently of the previous rank orderings, so that, for example, a given packet may be chosen first place match for more than one target if that provides the best ordering of descriptions. When the task is complete, the entire matrix should be filled in, at which time the packets are to be returned." (U) As an example of the quality of description obtained, the results generated in the first subgroup of five are shown in Figure 1 in the Executive Summary (Section II of this report). The captions contain quotes from the subject's first paragraph of each description. For a spool and a pin we have: "It's definitely something thin and long... with like a nail head at the end...silver colored;" for a curled up leaf: "a nautilus shape with a tail;" for a leather belt keyring: "The strongest image I get is like a belt;" for a can of sand: "like a miniature tower... scalloped bottom...light beige;" for a grey and white quill: "like a penguin... grey and black and white...it's organic and has been alive...pointed or slightly rounded off at the top...open or pointed at the bottom." (U) The judge's blind rank-order assessment for the entire ten- trial series is shown in Table 7(b). In the blind rank ordering of each target against five transcripts consisting of the appropriate transcript *(U) The judge was given a blank matrix to be filled in. For the form of the matrix, see Table 7(a), which is an example of a filled-in matrix. The numbers correspond to the judge's rank-ordering assess- ments; the circles indicate the actual transcript/target pair. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 UNCLASSIFIED Table 7 (U) DISTRIBUTION OF RANKINGS ASSIGNED TO SUBJECT RESPONSE PACKETS ASSOCIATED WITH EACH TARGET (U) (a) Example of Judging Matrix (First Five-Trial Subgroup) Transcri t Can Number p Letter 3 4 7 8 9 A (D 5 4 4 5 B 5 4 3 3 O1 C 3 3 ~1 1 2 D 4 ( 5 5 4 E 2 2 2 ?2 3 (b) Analysis Experiment Can Number Target Rank of Associated Packet 1 4 Spool and pin 1 2 7 Leaf 1 3 3 Keyring 1 4 8 Sand 2 5 9 Quill 1 6 1 Stamps 1 7 2 Plastic pig 5 8 10 Whistle 4 9 6 Metal spring 2 10 5 Doll 1 Total sum of ranks (10 trials/5 rankings each) 19 Probability of result by chance25 p = 0.009 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaaqO /Q9/Q9+~I-F C6D-00788R001300040001-4 (U) and four others, six of the ten transcripts were correctly matched, and two were matched in second place, a result significant at p = 0.009 (i.e., the probability of obtaining such a ranking by chance is less than 1 in a hundred). (U) It thus appears that small objects can be discriminated by psychoenergetic processes, and that the channel functions down to at least the order of one millimeter spatial resolution. Finally, success- ful use of the light-tight cans indicates that the light level required to illuminate the target can be vanishingly small.t B. Abstract Targeting of Building Interiors (U) (U) For the past several years we have been conducting remote- viewing experiments in which a subject in the laboratory is able to describe accurately the interior of a remote building given only geographical coordinates or a known outbound investigator on whom to target. In our experience, the outbound investigator need not be inside the building for the subject to provide an accurate description of the inside. It is sufficient for him to be in the general neighborhood of the building in question. (U) We had not, however, previously carried out an experiment to determine whether an experienced subject could describe the inside of a building, given only an envelope containing a photograph of the target (U) The appropriate analysis for preferential-ranking data is given in Ref. 25. The analysis requires that the ranking for each target be carried out independently--that is, with replacement--and the judge was so instructed. Evidence that this requirement was adhered to, to a close approximation, is provided by examination of Table 7(a), where the correct matching of four targets out of five did not yield an automatic match for the fifth, and Transcript C was twice selected as a first-place match (Targets 7 and 8). (U) The film cans were tested for light-tightness by exposing the cans containing 400 ASA Tri-X film to 30 flashes of a 1200 watt-second strobe light at 11 inches; photodensitometer traces showed no light explosure as compared with unexposed control film. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 1tfu88R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaseYJ4Jfr ?f FP-M (U) building. Therefore, we designed an experiment that involved handing the subject photographs of the outsides of buildings in the San Francisco Bay Area. In order to assure the absence of analytical guessing, the photos remained sealed inside opaque photographic enve- lopes throughout the experiment. The envelope plus its contents thus constituted an abstract targeting procedure. (See discussion in fourth paragraph of Section III-A.) (U) The targets, all stand-alone buildings in the Palo Alto area, were as follows: an indoor swimming pool, movie theater, public library, bowling alley, fire station, grocery store, auto showroom, airport hangar, research building, and Chinese restaurant. In each case a photo was taken in a manner to best conceal the true nature of the building. This was done to discriminate against simple remote viewing of an envelope's contents in favor of the contents acting as a means to target on the site in accordance with the goal of the experiment. (U) Ten trials were carried out, two per day over a period of five days. Each target was chosen by random-number generator access to the target pool, and the investigator with the subject was kept blind to the target. The randomly selected target envelope was handed to the subject for his assessment as to the structure, purpose, and activity associated with the site represented by the envelope's contents. The session was tape recorded and the subject was encouraged to generate sketches of the site to accompany his narrative. (U) After completion of each trial, the subject was allowed to open the envelope and look at the picture. At this point a second phase of the experiment was initiated in which the subject was asked to render a second interpretation of the site on the basis of the photograph. Finally, the subject was given feedback as to the exact nature of the building in question. (U) In the evaluation of this experiment it was clear that none of the subject's descriptions or drawings had more than a superficial resemblance to the target building under consideration. Neither the 49 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200ff/Q9_DP96-00788R001300040001-4 (U) unseen nor the seen photograph allowed the subject to make significant comments or drawings with regard to the intended target. The failure of these particular experiments contrasts sharply with the high degree of success achieved by the same subject during several years of work in our laboratory, and also with other successful experiments carried out during the same experimental period. (U) There are several possible factors that could contribute to the subject's inability to describe the remote buildings in these experiments. First, it must be recognized that it may be impossible to do the task required. We tend to discount this idea, since another gifted subject has apparently been able to do this task under similar conditions.3 A more likely explanation, in our opinion, is that the subject was overworked in this experimental series: A total of 30 trials of various types were carried out in a five-day period. This far exceeds the subject's previous work pace, and the subject complained of great fatigue at the end of many of the days. Further efforts along this line should be pursued before a final determination is made as to the feasi- bility of this procedure. C. Experiments with Analytical Targets (U) (S) In the course of this program we carried out several series of communications experiments involving the attempted transmission, from one laboratory to another, of analytical targets (numbers, letters, words). These series were initiated in an effort to assess reports of Soviet activities in this area. One of the Soviet experiments involved the transmission of numbers (decimal digits 0 through 9) with a claimed yield of 105 out of 135 digits. The a priori probability of such a result occurring by chance is p 10-77, an extremely significant result if true.26 1. Alphanumeric Targets (U) (U) In this series an investigator in one laboratory cycled through a set of targets by means of a random protocol, while a percipient, SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleasC fYNJf :DIE NP I-Al f8RO01300040001-4 (U) isolated in another laboratory, registered his responses. In some experiments the percipient knew the elements of the target pool (e.g., digits 0 through 9), while in others the target pool was essentially unknown (e.g., dictionary words). Target content for the various series was as follows: ten decimal digits--0 through 9; five written color words--yellow, red, blue, green, black; three alphanumerics--A, 1, 0; three specific words--cat, house, rhinoceros; and an open-ended list of random dictionary words. Computer analysis of the total of 1,100 trials completed indicated that the results in each case do not deviate significantly from chance expectation. (C) In addition to the above laboratory experiments carried out within SRI, a long-distance (Ohio-California) communication experiment utilizing binary digits (0, 1) as targets was undertaken. Each working day for a two-week period the contract monitor placed on display at his location a three-digit binary number, of which there are eight possi- bilities (000, 001, ... 111). At an agreed-upon time a subject located at the Radio Physics Laboratory at SRI, Menlo Park, California, attempted to perceive the three-digit number. The results of this experiment also did not deviate significantly from chance expectation. (U) We thus found in our experimentation an inability on the part of subjects to perceive alphanumeric material. This result is con- sonant with our general findings--namely, in paranormal perception the patterns of correct versus incorrect responses indicate specialization characteristic of the nonanalytic part of the brain's cognitive apparatus. This part of the brain is thought to deal mainly with spatial and holistic processing, in contrast to specialization in verbal or analytical functioning. 27-29 2. Color/Shape Targets (Parallels Between Remote Perception and Ordinary Perception) (U) (U) In an effort to devise an approach that might begin to train analytic perception ability, one of the program subjects devel- oped a gradient series of perception tasks that mimic the known CONFIDENTIAL Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200 R/eRC DP96-OO788ROO1300040001-4 (U) development of ordinary perception. The decision to follow such a protocol was derived from data indicating that the laws of paranormal perception are congruent with, rather than skew to, the laws that govern ordinary perception, especially under conditions of subliminal presentation. 30 (U) The approach was based on a specific perceptual orientation process known to hold in ordinary perception of color. The perceptual process of interest was the well-documented scale of increasing sensi- tivity to color tones. Cross-cultural studies of 98 separate linguistic stocks indicate that, from culture to culture, perception of color tones in the environment begins with discrimination first of black and white (dull/bright); then red is added as a color, then yellow or green followed by the other, then blue, brown, and finally purple, pink, orange, and grey. Although these latter are undistinguished at first, discrimination between them eventually occurs.31 (U) On the hypothesis that perhaps a similar gradient is followed by an individual in the development of paranormal perception, a lengthy pilot series of several hundred trials was carried out with an experienced subject to determine, in a simple lab-to-lab remote target card sequence, whether any correlation existed between color impressions, brightness/ dullness impressions, and accuracy of symbol recognition. (The symbols used were 0, T, and Q of various colors.) A post hoc analysis of the data indicated that in those cases where the subject was correct in his impression as to whether the target was bright (white, yellow) or dull (blue, black), he was able to recognize the symbol to a statistically significant degree. (S) This lengthy series on detailed alphanumeric material preceded the subject's viewing of the which yielded one of the better, more remote viewing results on the program. Therefore, we might conjecture along with the subject that the remote- viewing practice that occurred in this series may have helped to strengthen and sharpen the subject's skills. SECRET SG1 A Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release/(9/L9AC 2 Z b[)88R001300040001-4 (U) Based on the above observation, a second experienced subject was tested over a three-day period. This subject was instructed to attempt to differentiate remote target card symbols (0, T, A of various colors) first on the basis of the dichotomy dull/bright, and then with regard to shape, and only finally with regard to color. (Specifically, the subject was encouraged to reject premature mental discrimination processes based on color perception.) After noting an apparent learning curve in the data, a final test run was carried out before subject departure on the third day. For this run only, the subject was instructed to reject color perception altogether, and to simply indicate bright/dull followed by symbol shape. This test resulted in correct recognition of 10 out of 12 shapes consisting of the three symbols (0, T, A) of various colors randomly intermixed. The probability of such a result occurring by chance in less than one is 1800 (i.e., p < 5.5 x 10-4). On the basis of these preliminary results, further experimentation with this protocol will be carried out to determine whether the approach can lead to stable paranormal perception of alphanumeric targets, a task that has so far eluded parapsychology workers in this country. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release -51I) PPEID8R001300040001-4 A. Background Discussion It is standard practice in our laboratory, and in others, to provide subjects with feedback as to their results in paranormal perception experiments. This procedure is based on two factors: (1) the recognition in learning theory that feedback is important in learning any skill, and (2) the observation that subjects indeed do better when feedback is supplied. For most ordinary (non-paranormal) tasks, the role that feedback plays appears relatively straightforward. In paranormal experimentation, however, precognition of future events sometimes seems to occur. This raises the possibility that in paranormal perception experiments some part of the information obtained is a result of precognitive access to future feedback rather than direct remote viewing. If so, feedback to the subject would play a more substantive role in paranormal experimenta- tion than is usually the case. As a corollary, the withholding of feedback in paranormal experimentation could be especially deleterious. Feinberg of Columdia has even suggested that perhaps all of the informa- tion in remote viewing comes via precognition of feedback.32 In any case, there is strong evidence that feedback is an essential element for successful remote viewing, whether the reasons be simply psychological or more substantive, perhaps even physical. Therefore two experiments were undertaken to determine to what degree remote viewing could be elicited under conditions where the subject never receives feedback as to the target. B. Experimentation In these experiments, each of.two subjects independently made six remote-viewing trials. Both subjects were experienced in the remote- viewing task and have produced reliable and successful results in the UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaU sp ~~ L/A S S I F I E D 7888001300040001-4 In experiments with one subject we carried out six trials of standard remote viewing of local targets in the San Francisco Bay area with no feedback as to the target location visited by the outbound investigators. Instead, the subject was taken each day to a different one of a set of "feedback" locations, none of which were in the target pool for remote viewing. The subject was informed as to the nature of the experiment and knew that his task was to describe the place visited by the investigators, rather than the place he was to be shown after the experiment. The experiment nonetheless provided an opportunity to observe whether he would in fact describe the "feedback" site in place of the target site. The outcome of the experiment was determined by the blind matching of an independent judge. The judge was given a listing of the target sites in random order and a similar listing of the feedback sites, also in random order without being told which was which. He was also given the six transcripts produced by the subject. The judge then had two tasks. He had to rank-order the transcripts, as he thought they applied to each of the sites. This was done both for the target sites and the "feedback" sites. In blind matching of the subject's response to both the target locations and the feedback locations, no deviation from chance expecta- tion was found. In each case the judge correctly matched one target- transcript pair, which is the result expected by chance. If it had turned out that the matching of the transcripts to the target sites had been significant, it would have been evidence for direct perception of the site at the time of the outbound investigator's visit to that site. If, on the other hand, there had been significance in the matching of the transcripts to the feedback sites, we would have concluded that the subject tends to describe primarily the location about which he is eventually given feedback. The result, however, was that his effort to target on the correct site appeared to suffer in the absence of rele- vant feedback, but he was not diverted into describing an irrelevant false feedback target. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Releal3 4 /A Sf;FI)EEY788RO01300040001-4 In experiments with a second subject, we first carried out three standard experiments in the remote viewing of local San Francisco Bay Area sites with feedback. These were successful trials in which the subject described a secure map room, an outdoor swimming pool, and a church in sufficient detail for the transmission of a five-bit error- corrected message. (See Appendix D for a description of the application of the remote viewing of natural targets as a vehicle for message trans- mission with built-in error correction.) We then carried out three trials without feedback, in which the subject gave descriptions that in no way matched the targets. This was then followed by a final trial with feedback to establish whether the functioning would return. In this case the outbound investigators selected by the random-number generator protocol, the control tower at the Palo Alto airport, a location never before seen by this subject. The target was immediately described on tape as a "tower like building... rising out of organic petal shaped bushes. It is quite square with an enlarged tip on the top." A photograph of the tower, together with his drawing of it are shown in Figure 14. It would thus appear that reinsti- tuting the feedback condition rehabilitated the functioning. 1. General Taken together as a series, this experiment consisted of 13 indivi- dual remote-viewing experiments with experienced subjects. Of the 13 trials they made, none of those without feedback were successful, and all those with feedback were. From this we must conclude that, at least for the two subjects examined, who are ordinarily quite reliable, feed- back to the subject is an important aspect of the remote-viewing protocol. We cannot, of course, conclude that feedback is essential for substantive (e.g., physical) reasons, since the above series did not separate out psychological factors. In fact, both subjects expressed the feeling that the no-feedback condition was psychologically very frustrating to them. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release ,2pQ3D8/f h. ?IA-d,Dr86 3O788R001300040001-4 FIGURE 14 PALO ALTO AIRPORT TOWER TARGET. Described by subject as a square stone tower rising out of foliage at its base. (U) 58 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release U1131011y: g-?JP0J A0Z88R001300040001-4 NC u The next appropriate series of experiments with these normally successful subjects would be to intermix, on a random schedule, feedback and no-feedback trials, to eliminate any effect of psychological pre- disposition that a subject might have with regard to a given trial being carried out without feedback. At this point, however, we can conclude that feedback is important, whatever the cause. In the follow-on to the program reported here, we addressed the issue as to whether it was possible in principle to obtain information in the absence of feedback. Furthermore, the experiment was designed to factor out the psychological component: the subject did not know on a given trial whether feedback would be provided. The goal of this experiment was to determine if paranormal perceptual abilities could be elicited under conditions in which, for half the trials, on a random basis, the subject would never receive feedback as to his trial-by-trial performance. The task of this experiment was for the subjects to determine which one of ten digits, 0-9, had been chosen by an electronic random number generator and stored in a computer. The entire experiment was software programmed on a standard commercial microcomputer with typewriter/video 1.0. (Polymorphic Systems Model 8813 microcomputer). The subject indicated his choice by striking the appropriate key on the computer terminal. In a run of 20 trials, the subject received immediate feed- back for only ten of his choices, on a randomly determined schedule. In the feedback cases, the correct number was printed on the video terminal as soon as the subject made his selection. In the cases with- out feedback, the computer printed the words NO FEEDBACK, and went on to the next trial. Hits and misses were accumulated internally and only the totals were displayed at the end of each run of 20 trials. Results for all subjects were accumulated in a separate, protected file. Ten subjects were studied: seven controls (SRI volunteers) and three subjects a priori labeled "experienced." The seven SRI volunteers UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release hoe;9//o~9s s I F I E Do788ROO13ooo40001-4 did not produce scores differing from chance expectation in either experimental condition (FEEDBACK or NO FEEDBACK). All three of the experienced subjects, on the other hand, did produce individually significant departures from chance scoring. Of these, one subject scored significantly in the NO FEEDBACK case (p < 0.01, or odds of less than 1 in a hundred of such a result being obtained by chance). Thus it would appear that although feedback may play an extremely important psychological, and perhaps more substantive (e.g., physical) role, it is not absolutely essential. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Released MCQ9A YD88ROO1300040001-4 In assessing the possibility of remote sensing by modalities other than visual, we conducted an experiment in which the primary remote- sensing task was on audio one. We feel that the success of our earlier remote-viewing experiments has resulted from the following considerations: ? The targets have been "natural scenes" rather than contrived visual stimuli. ? The subjects were encouraged to describe nonanalytic features of the targets rather than to analyze the scene. ? The experiments were conducted in a relaxed atmosphere with approximately one trial per day. ? Whenever possible, immediate feedback was provided to the subject. These considerations served as a basis for the design of the remote audio experiment. Ten musical pieces were chosen for the target pool. These targets were selected on the basis of a nearly balanced mixture of classical, nonclassical, vocal and nonvocal music. The pool of ten pieces were chosen to keep the set as orthogonal as possible with regard to feeling, rhythm, instruments, and overall gestalt; they are listed in Table 8. In each trial a music tape was played for ten minutes in a building 1/8 mile distant from the subject to provide sufficient isolation to ensure no audio leakage path. As with the cans experiment (Section V), the ten trials were divided into two groups of five trials each. The procedure for random-number generator access to the pool of target tapes was the same as in the cans experiment, and the investigator monitoring the subject was, as usual, kept blind to the contents of the target pool. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 MUSIC TARGET POOL WITH PARTIAL ATTRIBUTE LIST Tape Recording Artist/Composer Mood Description 1 Olatunji; Drums Oya (Primitive Olatunji Rousing African drums 2 of Passion Sitar of India Fire) Dhun Jhinjhoti Melodic Sitar + tabla C 3 Rachmaninoff: Glory to God in Rachmaninoff Meditative Russian church Z n 4 Vespers Bach Organ the Highest Fugue in D Minor J. S. Bach Powerful music, a capella Strong organ music 5 Favorites Mozart--The Sonata in F Major, W. Mozart Relaxing Piano music N rn Complete Works k. 497 N for Piano 6 Come from the Love Song to a Joan Baez Romantic Clear vocal love T 7 Shadows The Concert for Stranger Wah-Wah George Harrison Loud song Acid rock; crowd 8 Bangla Desh An Evening Wasted Elements Tom Lehrer Humor noise Nonsense patter 9 with Tom Lehrer Vivaldi: The Concerto in C Vivaldi Lilting song Baroque flute 10 Complete Flute Concertos Also Sprach Major for Piccolo music Heavy orchestra Zarathustra selection Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Releas' aN/M9A SSff 1'pD88R001300040001-4 As in the remote-viewing experiments, the subject was encouraged to describe his impression of the overall mood of the remote audio "scene," and specifically discouraged from guessing the name of the musical number. The subject's comments were recorded for later transcription. Since the target tapes were chosen to be extremely different from each other, and since the monitor was to act as a judge, no feedback was given at the end of each trial to either subject or monitor. The judging technique employed was the rank-ordering procedure described for the canister experiments. The results of the rank-ordering analysis are shown in Tables 9 and 10. Of the two series of five trials, the second was the better. Three of the five transcripts were first-place matched without difficulty, as the correspondences between the transcripts and associated musical selections were excellent. (In the first series, there were no first- place matches, although three of the five were second-place matched.) Thus, there is possibly some indication of learning in this new task. Statistically, the odds of obtaining the observed matching results by chance are 1 in 2.3 and 1 in 12.5 for the first and second series, respectively. Therefore, considering that some of the individual cor- respondences were quite detailed and accurate, and considering that one of our other subjects (not present for this experiment) had performed exceptionally well in similar tests conducted in a different research laboratory, we would not conclude that this is a definitive null result. However, more experimentation is necessary to define the characteristics of this particular form of channel, and better statistical results would be required to place the results on a solid footing with regard to a positive interpretation. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 UNCLASSIFIED DISTRIBUTION OF RANKINGS ASSIGNED TO SUBJECT RESPONSE PACKETS ASSOCIATED WITH EACH TARGET FOR SERIES 1 Experiment Tape Musical Target Rank of Associated Transcript 1 7 Concert for Bangla Desh 4 2 1 Drums of Passion 2 3 10 Also Sprach Zarathustra 2 4 2 Sitar of India 2 5 4 Bach Fugue in D Minor 4 Total Sum of Ranks 14 Odds of Such a Result by Chance 1 in 2.3 DISTRIBUTION OF RANKINGS ASSIGNED TO SUBJECT RESPONSE PACKETS ASSOCIATED WITH EACH TARGET FOR SERIES 2 Experiment Tape Musical Target Rank of Associated Transcript 6 6 Baez Love Song to a 1 Stranger 7 9 Concerto for Piccolo 3 8 5 Mozart Sonata in F Major 1 9 8 The Elements 1 10 3 Vespers 4 Total Sum of Ranks 10 Odds of Such a Result by Chance 1 in 12.5 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/0Qt e c -E P96-00788R001300040001-4 VIII SUBJECT-INDUCED EQUIPMENT PERTURBATION EFFECTS (U) (S) The study of human/machine interactions as a psychoenergetic process has posed great difficulties for serious investigators. Among these difficulties are the combined facts that the reported effects tend to be small, and the local environment has rarely been monitored for causes alternative to the proposed psychoenergetic effects. In addition, one finds that the strongest effects are reported as occurring with the most controversial and/or suspect subjects. Out of this collection of questionable experimentation (and often poor reporting), emerge, however, a few provocative experimental results suggesting that further careful examination may be worthwhile and possibly rewarding. Such studies would provide valuable data for assessing whether the area of subject- induced equipment failures poses a potential threat. A. Strain-Gauge Experiments (U) (U) As a result of technical contacts with Prof. John Hasted, Birkbeck College, University of London, we have developed an interest in attempting to confirm his claim33'34 that he has observed inelastic and elastic deformations of metal bars by some kind of remote human inter- action. During these experiments the subjects are reported to cause effects without any physical contact with the metal. (U) In an effort to replicate Hasted's results, we have con- structed an electrically shielded enclosure having more than 135 dB RF attenuation from 10 kHz to 10 MHz and plexiglass sides (to shield against air currents). Within this enclosure is an experimental system of resistive strain gauges attached to a thin metal bar. These are wired as a temperature-compensating bridge and connected to battery-operated amplifiers and recording instruments. At present we can detect changes in the length of the bar on the order of 500 angstroms and applied transverse forces of approximately 100 mg. To date, we have been SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele V N C L 9 / Q S 91 f I t? 0788ROO1300040001-4 (U) successful in isolating and correcting several sources of artifact, and have obtained hours of artifact-free baseline operation. All of the data will be magnetically recorded for later computer analysis, and a simple strip-chart record will provide immediate feedback to the subject of any changes in the bar. We are encouraged with the progress of artifact isolation, and we will begin to task subjects to attempt to perturb the isolated metal bar during the follow-on program. (U) Should experimentation reveal genuine subject-induced pertur- bations, we will determine whether such effects can be used as a message-transmission device (remote telegraph). B. Random-Event Generator Experiments (U) (U) Another class of experiments that have been extensively reported are those that involve alleged human/machine interaction with electronic random-event generators. In these experiments, digital electronic noise derived either from a thermal noise source or from the decay of a radioactive material is monitored while a subject is attempting to alter the statistical properties of the noise distribution. The usual protocol involves providing visual and audio feedback signals, proportional to various statistical parameters, to a subject who is asked in a biofeedback scenario to concentrate upon the feedback signals and to alter them in a prescribed way. To date, there have been 54 such experiments reported in the literature,36 of which 35 report statistically significant effects, while none of these studies show similar departures from randomness during control runs. (U) We have completed the design stage of a micro-processor-based (LSI-11) random-event generator, and are in the hardware construction and assembly phase. We are using three fundamentally different sources of random events to derive the digital electronic noise signal. The first of these is a diode designed by R. H. Haitz,36 that is completely understood from both the quantum-mechanical and solid-state construction point of view. A second fundamentally different source of random events is to be derived from the decay of a single-transition beta emitter. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release aQMQ9~C AgTfP f f IU8RO01300040001-4 (U) Lastly, the entire system can be checked against a pseudorandom shift register that constitutes a third source of random events. This latter has the property that a long string of bits appears random, yet once the shift register is reinitialized it produces the identical random sequence once again. (U) The instrument is under control of a microprocessor that records data on magnetic tape for later analysis, and controls a printing I/O statistical calculator that provides immediate results for feedback. Once the instrument is complete, it will be exhaustively tested for possible artifacts resulting from environmental conditions. (U) We propose to use this instrument in the follow-on program first to attempt to confirm the existence of the claimed phenomenon. If it is confirmed, we will investigate theoretical implications with regard to various modes of human/machine interaction. Assuming that an effect can be stabilized, this microprocessor-based system can easily be re- programmed to utilize error-correcting coding techniques to construct a "remote" telegraph communication system. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/0tt ;,r- tLP9600788R001 300040001-4 IX SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS (U) (U) Experimental laboratory work continues to provide evidence for the existence of so-called psi processes, a class of interactions between consciousness and the physical world as yet unexplained. These include (1) the acquisition of information not presented to any obvious sense, and (2) the production of physical effects not mediated by any obvious mechanism. (S) At SRI we have concentrated primarily on the former, investi- gating a particular human information-accessing capability that we call "remote viewing." This phenomenon pertains to the ability of certain individuals to access and describe, by means of mental processes, infor- mation blocked from ordinary perception by distance or shielding, and generally believed to be secure against such access. Our data base now consists of several hundred trials in the remote viewing of targets ranging from objects in nearby light-tight canisters to geographic sites at transcontinential distances, and viewed from locations that include shielded Faraday cages and a submerged submarine. (S) Table 11 summarizes the key findings with regard to target acquisition, resolution, shielding, and distance effects; factors that appear to enhance or inhibit success in remote viewing; accuracy, reliability, and robustness; screening and training of subjects; and technological and theoretical considerations. (U) Data from these observations indicate that the phenomenon is characterized by resolution on the order of at least millimeters, apparent ineffectiveness of ordinary electrical shielding, and relative insensitivity to distance up to and including transcontinental distances. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200 /C9 R 'T DP96-00788RO01300040001-4 J1U 16 (U) With experienced subjects the accuracy and reliability of the phenomenon can also be characterized roughly by a two-thirds factor. That is, approximately two-thirds of a given transcript about a given site is correct, roughly two-thirds of a series of transcripts can be blind- matched by a judge to the correct target out of a list, etc. (S) Remote viewing, through the use of geographical coordinates as designators, has in many cases provided meaningful descriptions I Evaluation by appropriate intelligence community specialists indicates that a subject is able by this process to generate useful data corrob- orated by other intelligence data. As is generally true with human sources, the information is fragmentary and imperfect, and is therefore best utilized in conjunction with these other resources. Nonetheless, the data generated by this process appear to exceed any reasonable bounds of chance correlation or acquisition by ordinary means, and therefore constitute a potentially exploitable information source. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/69 : CIA'RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 (S) REMOTE-VIEWING STATE OF THE ART--CONCLUSIONS (U) Target acquisition Target attributes sensed Time of flight Subject can acquire target site on the basis of presence of cooperative person at site; targeting by geographical co- ordinates without person yields results comparable to those obtained in experiments in which a person known to the subject is used as a target. This observation offers evidence for goal-oriented as opposed to means-oriented interpretation of the "laws" that appear to govern psycho- energetic functioning. Descriptive aspects (shape, form, color, material) are described better than analyti- cal concepts (function, name) although at times the latter come through excellently; written target material correct only occasionally; alphabet targets successful only statistically. Information access often appears to be available in essentially "real" time. What is necessary for target acquisition (names, maps, pictures, other coordinate systems); accuracy of target acquisition in geographical coordinate case--e.g., circu- lar error of probability (CEP); how subject identifies target; whether person unknown to sub- ject can be tracked on the basis of biographical informa- tion, pictures, etc. Whether analytical psi can be trained to levels similar to descriptive psi. Time of flight of psychoener- getic phenomena; mechanism of propagation. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SG1A SG1A Temporal resolution Spatial resolution Shielding Sensory modalities (S) Table 11 (Continued) (U) Real-time activities at the target site are often perceived; experiments have included suc- cessful real-time remote viewing Extent to which a subject can improve temporal resolution and accuracy of the process; upper limit to bit rate and ability to track targets in motion. (differentiation between successful firings and scrubs, timing to within ten seconds); ephemeral, rapid, or repetitive targets more difficult. on the order of one millimeter or less. Accuracy and resolution not a sensitive function of subject- target distance over intercon- tinental distances. Extent to which subject can improve spatial resolution. Whether, or at what range, distance effects become important. Faraday cage or seawater elec- trical shielding not effective shield. In addition to visually obser- vable detail, subjects some- times report sounds, smells, electromagnetic fields, etc. that can be verified as exist- ing at target locations. Whether magnetic shielding is effective. The accuracy of nonvisual sensory modalities; other sensory modes available. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/091d9 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 (S) Table 11 (Continued) (U) Factors that appear to inhibit A priori subject knowledge of Effects of environmental success in remote viewing target possibilities; absence of physical factors; EM jamming. feedback; application of ability to trivial tasks (testing for the sake of testing); use of repetitive target sequence. Factors that appear to enhance Interest factor for subject; a Effects of environmental success in remote viewing priori necessity and relevancy physical factors; EM generators for obtaining information for targeting. (seriousness of purpose); pres- ence of a facilitating monitor to ask questions and direct the subject's attention; practice with feedback. Accuracy and reliability Analysis of remote-viewing Achievement levels to be transcripts generated by reasonably expected. experienced subjects indicates that for a given target site roughly two-thirds of the sub- ject-generated material consti- tutes an accurate description of the site, while about one- third is ambiguous, general, or incorrect. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 (S) Table 11 (Continued) (U) Use of redundancy to improve Redundancy, whereby more than Optimum number of subjects for signal-to-noise ratio one individual attempts to efficient utilization of this collect data on a given target, approach. improves reliability by reducing the effect of the biases of individual subjects. Repeatability of phenomena Continuing demonstrations in this program, and replications in other laboratories, 14-19 indicate that the capability known as "remote viewing" is a re- peatable human perceptual ability. Distribution of psychoenergetic Abilities appear widespread, Percentage of population with capacity in population; though latent; volunteers with natural talent or trainable; identification of good subjects no previous history of psycho- optimum screening procedures; energetic functioning exhibit medical or psychological pro- ability in screening experiments, file of good subjects. indicating that reliance on the availability of special subjects may not be necessary. Improvement potential Subjects trained over a several- Whether near-perfect results as year period have shown improved sometimes obtained can become performance, with regard to both routine. accuracy and reliability. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 1 11 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 (S) Table 11 (Continued) (U) Technological considerations Low-level perturbation of equip- Degree to which phenomena can ments observable during remote be stabilized and mechanized, viewing (magnetometer, noise and and to which energy can be nuclear-decay-driven random stored; to what extent psycho- event generator). energetic processes can be amplified by technological means. Theoretical considerations Phenomena characteristics often Precise mechanisms responsible appear to be at variance with for the phenomena; relation- present scientific models. ship of phenomena to electro- magnetic, quantum, etc. bases of present scientific under- standing; whether the data can be accounted for within the framework of physics as presently understood, or on the basis of conservative extra- polations that have been pro- posed to account for other (non-psi) data. Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Releasq $OQ /e/e9A ~ 16 b88ROO1300040001-4 Appendix A STANDARD REMOTE-VIEWING PROTOCOL (LOCAL TARGETS) UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaseUN(9 i9jk.53tf94ED8R001300040001-4 Appendix A STANDARD REMOTE-VIEWING PROTOCOL (LOCAL TARGETS) The basic outline of our standard remote-viewing protocol is as given in our tutorial paper, "A Perceptual Channel for Information Transfer over Kilometer Distances: Historical Perspective and Recent Research," H. Puthoff and R. Targ, Proc. IEEE, pp. 329-354, March 1976.9 The elements of the protocol, each of which is addressed below, consist of (1) target pool selection; (2) subject orientation; (3) outbound investigator behavior; (4) inbound investigator behavior; (5) post- experiment feedback; (6) judging procedure. 1. Target Pool Selection To carry out an experimental series of, say, n trials with a subject, a list of targets >> n should be prepared in advance by an investigator who will not interact with the subject after that. The targets should be chosen to be distinctive, but not necessarily distinct from each other; that is, rather than just a collection of nondescript street corners one should select bridges, towers, fountains, gardens, plazas, etc., so that a judge could in principle recognize targets on the basis of correct but sketchy descriptions. On the other hand, once having chosen a fountain-type target, there should be several fountain targets; for a bridge target, several bridge targets, etc., in order to avoid the possible subject strategy of "I had a bridge yesterday, so it can't be a bridge today." The subject should be told explicitly that there are similar as well as different types of targets. When the target list is made, each target location should be written on a card and placed in an envelope, the envelopes randomized and numbered. These should then be stored in a secure safe or similar container. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele-aspgt/Q9/Q9c t1-11~8~,Q0788R001300040001-4 With regard to whether a target is replaced in the pool after use, the preferable procedure, from a methodological standpoint, is to replace it. (A problem with actual replacement is that the subject, upon becoming aware of a mental image of a previous target, might be biased to reject it as memory. An acceptable alternative is to replace a used target by a new one of similar type--e.g., one fountain by another.) 2. Subject Orientation Before the experiment, the subject should be shown some previous remote-viewing results with one goal in mind--to get across the idea that one should, as nearly as possible, report raw perception rather than analysis, since the former tends to be correct and the latter is almost always wrong. A subject needs to understand that a rounded piece of blue metal is just that, and that he should not initially try to determine what it is. Remind the subject that imagination constitutes noise in the channel, and therefore the closer he can get to raw uninter- preted imagery, the better. To have success in the above, the best guideline we have found is to choose as subjects individuals who are self-confident, uninhibited, successful, and not afraid to be wrong. No psychological test we have investigated is as reliable as the above subjective assessment in choosing subjects. 3. Outbound Investigator Behavior At the start of an experimental session, the inbound and outbound investigators and subject should rendevous for a relaxed informal dis- cussion in the laboratory setting. (The outbound investigator or * Figures 3 and 4 in the IEEE paper9 are good examples. In Figure 4 the subject had absolutely no concept of a pedestrian overpass, but simply saw a pattern of receding squares; in Figure 3 correctly-dimensioned pools of water were misinterpreted as purification plant pools rather than recreational swimming pools. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release eL Al5 5MED8R001300040001-4 investigators must not know the target at this time.) Together they agree on a time for the subject description to start (e.g., 30 minutes hence--the length of time required to.reach the furthest target in the pool; this time is then an invariant for all experiments.) The outbound investigator then leaves the laboratory, uses a random-number generating procedure to obtain a number from 1 - n (number of targets in pool), obtains the so-numbered envelope from the target pool, and leaves the premises. (We use a Texas Instruments SR-51 hand calculator, which has a random-number function.) After driving away from the laboratory, he opens the envelope to determine the target, and then proceeds to that location. He should arrange to park and then come upon the target location at exactly the starting time so that his view of it is fresh at the beginning of the experiment. He then simply pays attention to the environment and does not let his mind wander (especially to another target). It does not appear to matter how many people comprise the out- bound team, provided they do not (1) pay attention only to each other, or (2) scatter about. At the end of the agreed-upon target viewing time (usually 15 minutes) they return to the lab. 4. Inbound Investigator Behavior During the period that the outbound investigators spend en route to the target, the inbound investigator and subject have a period to relax and discuss the protocols. (Inbound it is best not to have addi- tional observers.) The goal of the inbound investigator during this period is to make it "safe" for the subject to experience remote viewing. For the initial orientation of a new subject, this typically includes a low-key pep talk as to how remote viewing appears to be a natural, not abnormal, function, that many people appear to have done it successfully, even their first time, and always including the reminder to eschew analysis and simply render raw impressions. Since we think that remote viewing is a difficult task, like per- ceiving a subliminal stimulus, we think it takes the full attentive powers of the subject. Therefore, the environment, procedures, etc., should be as natural and comfortable as possible to minimize the UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleffMt ?boo788Rool3ooo4oool -4 attention on anything other than the job at hand. No hypnosis, strobe lights, or sensory-deprivation procedures are ever used, since in our view these (novel) environmental factors take away some of the subject's much-needed attention. We are in this sense proponents of a "naturalist school." If the subject feels more comfortable smoking, or drinking a cup of coffee, that is permitted. These should be arranged ahead of time, however, so that neither subject nor investigator leave the experi- mental room while waiting for the outbound investigator to reach his target. The investigator should have arranged ahead of time to have pen and paper available for drawing, and a tape recorder. When the agreed-upon experiment time arrives, the inbound investigator simply asks the subject to "describe what impressions come to mind with regard to where the outbound experimenter is." Most subjects prefer to close their eyes, but they should simply do what comes naturally. The room lighting is preferably subdued to prevent after-image highlights, shadows on eyelids, etc. It is best that the inbound investigator not pressure the subject to say a lot; he should act as if there is all the time in the world. Otherwise, a subject may tend to embroider descriptions just to be saying something to please the investigator. If the subject tends toward being analytical ("I see Macy's") the investigator must gently lead the subject into description, not analysis. ("You don't have to tell me where it is, just describe what you see.") This is the most important and difficult task of the inbound investigator. It is also useful for the inbound investigator to "surprise" the subject with new viewpoints. ("Go above the scene and look down--what do you see? If you look to the left, what do you see?") The subject's viewpoint appears to shift rapidly with a question like this, and the data come through before the subject's defenses activate to block it out. The shifting of viewpoint also obviates the problem of the subject spending the entire time giving meticulous detail on a trivial item, such as a flower, which, even if true, will be of no help to a judge. Once a subject feels he sees something, he tends to hang on to this perception rather than commit himself to a new viewpoint. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release MAlS- 1-LV[)8R001300040001-4 The subject must be encouraged to sketch what he sees, even over his objections that he is not an artist, can't sketch, etc. He may do so throughout, or wait until the last five minutes if intermittent drawing would distract his concentration. Since drawings tend to be more accurate than verbalizations, this is an extremely important factor for good results. 5. Post-Experiment Feedback When the outbound investigator returns, the inbound and outbound investigators and subject should proceed directly to the target for feedback. This helps to develop the subject's sense of which parts of his mental imaging are correct, versus incorrect. It completes the experiment for him, so that when he does a following experiment, his mind is not still involved with wondering how he did on the previous one. Only a very experienced subject can function well time after time without feedback, so this must be done for each experiment to ensure success. 6. Judging Procedure In a sense, the most critical part of the remote-viewing procedure is the judging. Any single experiment in remote viewing, even if per- fect, can in principle be dismissed as possibly coincidence. Further, any result less than perfect can be dismissed as a generalized "grass is green, sky is blue" transcript that fits every target. Only blind differential discrimination across a series of targets can put these interpretations to rest. To prepare the transcripts for judging, an investigator not involved in judging must read the transcripts and delete from them any reference to dates or previously used targets, so that a judge could not order the transcripts chronologically or otherwise obtain a priori information useful in matching. Two judging procedures can then be used: Direct Matching, and Rank Ordering. Both procedures assume that n experiments have been UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele0e_2~~ L9A S S I F I E D 07888001300040001-4 carried out and n responses obtained. The judge must then try to determine which of the n responses goes with which of the n targets. a. Direct-Matching Procedure The n responses (transcripts with associated drawings) are numbered in random order and given to the judge along with the list of n targets, also in a (different) random order. The key is known by an investigator, but not the judge. The judge then visits the target sites and con- structs a one-to-one correspondence list between targets and responses without replacement; that is, no target or response is used twice. With the correspondence list and the aid of the key, the investigator then consults the statistical table for Direct Matching (Table A-1) to determine whether the result is statistically significant. For example, if there were 5 correct matches out of 9 responses, the table indicates that the probability of obtaining such a result by chance is p = 0.003125, or roughly 3 times out of a thousand. Since the accepted standard in behaviorial research is that a result can be considered significant if one obtains the value p s 0.05, such a result would be considered sig- nificant--that is, indicative of a nonchance correspondence. The Direct Matching procedure is the simplest to carry out, but will give no credit for a fairly good description if a judge has difficulty in choosing between two possibilities and chooses the wrong one. This procedure is thus overly conservative. The more difficult Rank ordering procedure, described next, gives partial credit in such a case, and is therefore a more precise statistical tool for analysis of medium-grade results. b. Rank-Ordering Procedure In the use of the Rank-Ordering procedure, the investigator ran- domizes the targets and transcripts as before. Now, however, each of n judges is given a set of the n transcripts but only one of the target sites to investigate. Each judge's task is to visit his assigned target UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 (U) DIRECT MATCHING (U) M* 1v a 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 17 0 ... .5000 .3333 .3750 .366b7 .368n6 .36786 .367882 .367879 .367879 .3678794 .3678794 1 1.000 ... .5000 .3333 .37500 .36667 .36806 ?367857 .367882 .367879 .3678795 .3678794 2 .5000 ... .2500 .16667 .18750 .18333 .184028 .183929 ?183941 .1839396 .1839397 .1667 ... .08333 .05556 .06250 .061111 .061343 ?061310 .0613137 .0613132 SIGNIFICANT AT (4 or more out of p < 0.05 any arbitrary N) ... .00417 .002778 .003125. ?003056 .0030671 .0030655 .00120 ... 0000099 .000066 .0000 44 .006 728 .000025 ... 9000012 .0000083 .0000093 9 ?000003 ..? ?0000014 .0000009 10 .000000 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleU~p4p9/p 8III C V00788R001300040001-4 site, read through all the transcripts, and order them best-to-worst match (1 through 5, say, if there are five targets and five transcripts). With the aid of the key, the investigator then adds up the rank- ordering numbers assigned to each target's associated transcript. For example, if the actual response to a target was given a first place when a judge was looking at that target, then it gets a 1. If the actual response to a target was given a third place match when a judge was looking at that target, then it gets a 3, etc. The addition of these numbers 1 + 3 + ... then yields a number called the sum of ranks. One then consults the rank-ordering table (Table A-2) for the statistic of interest. For example, if there were 5 experiments (5 targets and 5 transcripts) and the sum of ranks was 9, the table for 5 x 5 gives a probability of obtaining such a rank ordering result by chance of 0.0403..., which is significant. A more complete set of tables is given in Solfvin et al. 25 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release V IV L9 Sypte(D 8ROO1300040001-4 Number of Targets = 4; Number of Transcripts = 4 SUM OF RANKS P--VALUE 4 0.390631-02 5 0.19531E-01 6 0.585941-01 7 0.136721 00 8 0.25781E 00 9 0.41406E 00 10 0.585941 00 .11 0.7421.9F.: 00 12 0.86328E 00 13 0.94141E 00 14 0.98047E:: 00 15 0.996091: 00 16 0.100001 01 Number of Targets 5; Number of. Transcripts = 5 SUM OF RANKS P-VALUE 5 0.32000E-03 6 C.19200E-02 7 0.672001-02 8 0.17920E-01 9 0.4032.01-01 10 0.79040E-01 11 0.138241 00 12 0.219841 00 13 0.32224E 00 14 0.439041 00 15 0.56096E 00 16 0.67776E 00 17 0.780161 00 18 0.86176E 00 19 0.92096E 00 20 0.95968E 00 21 0.98208E 00 22 0.99328E 00 23 0.99808E 00 24 0.99968E 00 25 0.10000E 01 The potation E-02 is to be understood as 10-2; E 01 as 101; etc. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele0E 0 L9/09- ?If ffg60788R001 300040001-4 Table A-2 (Continued) Number of Targets = 6; Number of Transcripts = 6 SUM OF RANKS P-VALUE 6 0.21433E-04 7 0.15003F-03 8 0.60014F-03 9 0.18004E-0.2 10 0.45010F"-02 11 0.99023F_02 12 0.19676E-01 13 0.35880r.-01 14 0.60764r -01 15 0.96472E-01 16 0 0,14463F 00 17 0.20585E 00 18 0.27939E 00 19 0.3630E 00 20 0.45357E 00 21 0.54642F 00 22 0.63689F 00 23 0.72061E 00 24 0.79415E 00 25 0.85537E 00 26 0.90353F 00 27 0.93923E 00 28 0.96412E 00 29 0.98032E 00 30 0.99010E 00 31 0.9955OF 00 32 0.99820F" 00 33 0.99940E 00 34 0.999851 00 35 0.999,38E 00 336 0.10000E 01 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For ReleaseUNCI9AITQFY EDP 8R001300040001-4 Table A-2 (Continued) Number of Targets = 7;-Number of Transcripts = 7 SUM OF RANKS P-VALUE 7 0.12143E-05 8 0.97141E-05 9 0.437141-04 10 0.14571E-03 11 0.400711-03 12 0.96170E-03 13 0.20837E-02 14 0.41589E-02 15 0.77458E-C2 16 0.135F;5E-01 ?7 0.22595F-01 18 0.35838E-01 19 0.544531-01 20 0.75544E-01 21 0..11205E 00 22 0.15259E 00 23 0.20137E 00 24 0.25802E 00 25 0.32161E 00 26 0.39065E 00 27 0.463150 CO 28 0.53685E 00 29 0.601.35E 00 30 0.67839E 00 31 0.741981 00 32 0.79863E 00 33 0.84741E 00 34 0.88795E 00 35 0.92045E 00 36 0.94555E 00 37 0.96416E 00 3, 8 0.977401 CO 39 0.986411 00 40 0.99225E 00 41 0.99584E 00 42 0.997911 00 43 0.999031 co 44 0.99958E 00 45 0.999841 00 46 0.99595E 00 47 0.99998E 00 48 0.99999E 00 49 0.10000E 01 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Relepg14O 3L_O Ot?I fEb11118R001300040001-4 Table A-2 (Continued) Number of Targets = 8; Number of Transcripts = 8 SUM OF RANKS P-VALUE` 8 0.596051-07 9 0.536441-06 10 0.266221-05 11 0.983481-05 12 0.29504E-04 13 0.767111 -04 14 0.178 99F-03 15 0.38356F-03 16 0.76663E-03 17 0'.1.44 471-02 18 0.258(71-02 19 0.442E4F-02 20 0.72724E-02 21 0.11515E-01 22 0.17628E-01 23 0.26157E-01 24 0.377021-01 25 0.52890E-01 26 0.72328E-01 27 0.96562E-01 28 0.12602E 00 29 0.160951 00 30 0.20139E 00 31 0.247141 00 32 0.297721 00 33 0.35237E 00 34 0.41012E 00 35 0.46982E 00 36 0.53018E 00 37 0.58988E 00 38 0.64763E 00 39 0.70228E 00 40 0.75286E 00 41 0.79860E 00 42 0.83905E 00 43 0.873981 00 44 0.90344E 00 45 0.92767E 00 46 0.94711E 00 47 0.96229E 00 48 0.97384E 00 49 0.98237E 00 50 0.98849E 00 51 0.99273E 00 52 0.99.557.1 00 53 0.99741E 00 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release Q( /AUM_ 001rd8ROO1300040001-4 Table A-2 (Continued) Number of Targets = 9; Number of Transcripts = 9 SUM OF RANKS P-VALUE 9 0.25812E-08 10 0.258121-07 11 0.1.41961-06 12 0.567861-06 13 0.184551-05 14 0.51675E-05 15 0.129191-04 16 0.29529E-04 17 0.62748E-04 18 0.12547E-03 19 0.238211.-03 20 0.43226E-03 21 0.75357E-03 22 0.126731-02 23 0.20628E-02 24 0.32586E-02 25 0.500751-02 26 0.750037-02 27 0.10968E-01 28 0.156831-01 29 0.21954E-01 30 0.301221-01 31 0.40548F-01 32 0.53601E-01 33 0.69639E-01 34 0.889891-01 35 0.111921 00 36 0.13864E 00 37 0.16924E 00 38 0.203701- 00 39 0.241'89E 00 40 0.283531 00 41 0.32821E 00 42 0.375401 00 43 0.42447E 00 44 0.47469E 00 45 0.52531E 00 46 0.575531 00 47 0.624601 00 48 0.67179E 00 49 0.71647E 00 50 0.7581.11 00 51 0.796301 00 52 0.83076E 00 53 0.861361 oo 54 0.88807E 00 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Rele00?~0310A9S It 9bO0788RO01300040001-4 Table A-2 (Concluded) Number of Targets = 10; Number of Transcripts = 10 SUM OF RANKS P-VALUE 10 0.10000E-09 11 O.11000F-08 12 0.66000E-08 13 0.28600E-07 14 0.100105-06 15 0.30030E-06 16 0.8008OF-06 17 0.19448E-05 18 0.43758E-05 19 0.92378E-05 20 0.18475F-04 21 0.352615-04 22 0.64559E-04 23 0.114125-03 24 0.19512E-03 25 0.32387E-03 26 0.52317E-03 27 0.824185-03 28 0.12686E-02 29 0.191065-02 30 0.28197E-02 31 0.408255-02 32 0.580495-02 33 0.811335-02 34 0.11156E-01 35 0.151035-01. 36 0.20143E-01 27 0.26484E-01 38 0.34347E-01 39 0.43960'-C1 40 0.55552E-01 41 0.69345E-01 42 0.855415-01 43 0.10432E 00 44 0.12581E 00 45 0.150115 00 46 0.177255 00 47 0.207215 00 48 0.23987E 00 49 0.27506E 00 50 0.312555 00 51 0.35202E 00 52 0.393115 00 53 0.43538E CC 54 0.478385 00 92 UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release thqUA,Cl~ ~ i C I E D 8001300040001-4 Appendix B SUMMARY OF KEY EXPERIMENTS IN LONG-DISTANCE COORDINATE REMOTE VIEWING GENERATED FOR THIS PROGRAM DURING PREVIOUS YEAR (U) UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SG1A L Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Next 4 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 200/ /MEk~jRDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SLC 2. Sponsor-Designated Targets in the USSR (S) (S) The project monitor conveyed to SRI investigators the coordi- nates of the first Soviet site. Although the coordinates were intended to designate an airport of interest, they were obtained from a list that in fact corresponded to a nearby population center. In response, a sub- ject targeted on this site generated the drawing of a dam as shown in Figure B-5. This drawing was delivered to the project monitor who had forwarded the coordinates. Although the existence of the dam was unknown to the project monitor when he chose the coordinates, he later verified that a dam resembling the subject's drawing was located within a few miles of the coordinates, roughly as far from the population center as the airport of interest. (U) It was then agreed that the appropriate next step was to obtain an overview from the subject without indicating to him that the item of interest was an airport. Should he find an airport during this second phase, he would then be asked for more detail. This procedure was followed and resulted in the overview shown in Figure B-6; the sub- ject did in fact mention an airport in his overview. After completion of the overview, the SRI investigator monitoring the subject's efforts requested more detail on the airport. Figure B-7(a) shows the runway outlines and nearby buildings, while Figure B-7(b) indicates detail on a structure at the end of the major runway. These data were evaluated by the project monitor, and much of the description was verified. Further details can be supplied on a need-to-know basis by the project officer. b. Soviet Site 2 (S) (S) Coordinates for a second Soviet site were given to SRI investi- gators, who then passed them on to a subject. As a result of an error on the part of the individual who chose the coordinates, the coordinates were not of a site of interest, but rather of a barren area out in the countryside. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09I Cfi~6-00788RO01300040001-4 11"IY74 l0-vct- m 0~.!5 Vllf G~ lO W -41 'S hu 4'` FIGURE B-5 REMOTE VIEWING BY GEOGRAPHICAL COORDINATES OF DAM SITE IN THE USSR (S) 101 SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2009Q~/9,9RCj DP96-00788RO01300040001-4 14 m,a~ 7G II.3v.P?m- ~'' c, 4 , gyp S 1c4 caf R.ert d S N'l t S ~S ~` I,iV1i wi oc c)J a iS ,gat icn. `t casan d?'`' yQ ~ ~ nac~:a f~U Vl S~Q,?Mti c, V1 a cpa) Vu-~: to FIGURE B-6 REMOTE-VIEWING OVERVIEW OF DAM-SITE LOCALE, SHOWING AIRPORT OF INTEREST IN THE LOWER LEFT (U) SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003109153E C1, I 6-00788R001300040001-4 1 4 enw,e/QO d FIGURE B-7 REMOTE-VIEWING SKETCH OF DETAIL ON RUNWAYS AND STRUCTURES (Soviet Airport) (S) SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Releps~3~09Jp ~IfiS00788R001300040001-4 (U) In response to the coordinates, the subject described a town to the southwest and a relatively barren area with "loopy roads" at the target site (Figure B-8). As before, the sketches and a written description were turned over for evaluation to the project monitor, who subsequently verified the results as matching the coordinates given in error. The error thus provided an opportunity to verify that (1) the subject's output is not simply geared to match the expectations of the investigators, and (2) the subject does not simply conjure up what may reasonably be expected to be correct (an educated or "safe" guess), but in fact describes the area appropriate to the coordinates even though it may run counter to the subject's own expectations. This experiment thus inadvertently provided a control trial of the type useful in the testing of human abilities. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/0 MB["96-00788R001300040001-4 4a/ f e iPs cf 9 Y---nm k$ 1 `'oaA FIGURE B-8 RURAL SOVIET SITE (S) SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 UNCLASSIFIED DATA-SOURCE TRANSCRIPT (COMPLETE) (U) UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 SG1A L Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Next 4 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release V I V ct AJ ST}6Ito 8ROO1300040001-4 Appendix D ERROR-CORRECTING CODING AND THE REMOTE VIEWING OF TARGET SITES AS A MESSAGE-SENDING MEDIUM UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release tgAFP1D8R001300040001-4 Appendix D ERROR-CORRECTING CODING AND THE REMOTE VIEWING OF TARGET SITES AS A MESSAGE-SENDING MEDIUM One of the most successful psychoenergetic processes is the remote viewing of target locations demarcated by some means, such as the presence at the site of an individual known to the "viewer." Unfortu- nately, this process--which works so well--results in narrative descrip- tions that are difficult to assess in a quantitative manner. In order to utilize the remote-sensing phenomenon as a tool to investigate the physical and psychological parameters of psychoenergetics processes, it is important to establish optimum analysis (judging) pro- cedures. Because experiments are designed with the goal of varying specific parameters, such as subject shielding or the necessity of feed- back, the analysis or judging procedure must be as rapid as possible, while retaining objectivity, if immediate feedback to both subject and investigators is to be provided. To make an objective analysis of a single response from a subject during a remote-sensing experiment, it is necessary to quantify the target content in some discrete way. From an examination of the data base accumulated to date it would appear that at least five recurrent target attributes are frequently sensed correctly by our subjects. If each of these attributes is assigned a binary digit--a "one" if the attribute is present at the target site, and a "zero" if it is absent-- we can, for the sake of research experimentation, construct a pool of 32 targets corresponding to all possible combinations of five individual attribute bits (see Table D-1). A judging procedure utilizing the binary-coded target pool is as follows. After a target is selected at random, and after the subject has registered his response in the usual way, the judge's task is simply to ascertain from the subject's response whether each of the five UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Relet 2p 1 9M9_ ~tffi-Sra.-00788RO01300040001-4 QUANTITATIVE JUDGING TECHNIQUE Code Word Bit Position Target Attribute Bit Assignment 1 Inside 1 Outside 0 2 Subdued lighting 1 Bright lighting 0 3 Wet 1 Dry 0 4 Passive 1 Active 0 5 Man-made 1 Natural 0 attributes is present (1), or absent (0). The resulting five-bit number is then compared to the actual five-bit number for the target. In the case of good functioning, it is possible to obtain statistically signi- ficant results with one or two such trials. From pilot work it appears that the individual attributes are identified with 80% reliability; thus the results indicate that this judging procedure may provide a rapid and accurate technique to use remote sensing as a tool to test various models of psychoenergetic functioning. This technique provides an additional benefit for the transmission of messages. With judicious assignment of the attributes in terms of l's and 0's, it is possible to transform a given target into one of the specially coded words shown at the top of Table D-2--for example, an indoor swimming pool would be rendered as the code word 10101. These code words are carefully chosen37 to construct an error-correcting block code of a type commonly used for signal transmission over noisy informa- tion channels. To send one of four messages using our standard remote-sensing protocol, an outbound team of investigators chooses the message whose attributes match one of the four shown on the top of Table D-2 and UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 UNCLASSIFIED Table D-2 A 5-BIT DECODING MATRIX (Two Information Bits, Three Parity Check Bits) 00000 01110 10101 11011 00001 01111 10100 11010 00010 01100 10111 11001 00100 01010 10001 11111 01000 00110 11101 10011 10000 11110 00101 01011 00011 01101 10110 11000 Double Error 01001 00111 11100 10010 Correction proceeds to a target location corresponding to the binary word chosen. The subject and his monitor then conduct a standard remote-viewing experiment. (The subject is encouraged to respond freely, and is discouraged from guessing with regard to the attribute list.) Once the response period is completed, a judge must form a single binary word from the subject's response, as described above. The judge then must find his "response" word somewhere in the decoding matrix shown in Table D-2 and choose as his "message received" the word that tops the column in which the response word appears. By inspection of Table D-2, one finds that the decoding matrix will correct for all single errors in attribute labeling, and will correct for some double errors. Figure D-1 shows the enhanced probability of receiving a two-bit message correctly over that expected if no error correction is used. This procedure was used successfully in experiments described in Section VI. UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Relep{~$ mwzf)t~ Sl fM 00788R001300040001-4 0.50 0.60 0.70 0.80 0.90 1.00 P5: PROBABILITY OF CORRECTLY PERCEIVING A SINGLE BIT FIGURE D-1 USE OF A 5-BIT ERROR-CORRECTING CODE TO INCREASE PROBABILITY OF CORRECT MESSAGE RECEPTION (U) UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Release 2003/0$ cR.ET96-00788RO01300040001-4 REFERENCES (U) "Paraphysics R&D--Warsaw Pact (U)," DIA Document No. DST-18105- 202-78, Defense Intelligence Agency, Washington, D.C. (March 30, 1978), SECRET-NOFORN. "Soviet and East European Parapsychology Research (U)," CIA Document No. Si 77-10012, Central Intelligence Agency, Washington, D. C. (April 1977), SECRET-NOFORN. 3. "Parapsychology in Intelligence: A Personal Review and Conclusions (S-NOFORN)," Studies in Intelligence, Vol. 21, No. 4 (Winter 1977), SECRET-NOFORN. 4. E.C. Wortz et al., "Novel Biophysical Information Transfer Mechanisms (NBIT)," Document No. 76-13197, Final Report prepared for Central Intelligence Agency, Contract No. XG-4208 (54-20)75S, Airesearch Manufacturing Company of California, a Division of Garrett Corporation, Torrance, Calif. (January 14, 1976), UNCLASSIFIED. 5. "Soviet and Czechoslovakian Parapsychology Research (U)," DIA Document No. DST-181OS-387-75, Defense Intelligence Agency, Washington, D. C. (September 1975), CONFIDENTIAL. 6. "Controlled Offensive Behavior (U)," DIA Document No. ST-CS-01-169- 72, Defense Intelligence Agency, Washington, D.C. (July 1972), SECRET-NOFORN. 7. "Views on Emerging Areas of Science and Technology Potentially Important to National Security (C)," STIC 75-4, U.S. Intelligence Board Scientific and Technical Intelligence Committee (USIB-STIC), Washington, D.C. (December 1975), CONFIDENTIAL. 9. H.E. Puthoff and R. Targ, "A Perceptual Channel for Information Transfer over Kilometer Distances: Historical Perspective and Recent Research," Proc. IEEE, Vol. 64, pp. 329-354 (March 1976), UNCLASSIFIED. 10. H. Puthoff and R. Targ, "Perceptual Augmentation Techniques (U)," Final Report, SRI Project 3183, Stanford Research Institute, Menlo Park, Calif. (December 1, 1975), SECRET. SECRET Approved For Release 2003/09/09 : CIA-RDP96-00788R001300040001-4 Approved For Relea JQOXQ9/A S S I F I E p 7888001300040001-4 _UNC 11. H.E. Puthoff and R. Targ, "Direct Perception of Remote Geographical Locations," Proc. IEEE ELECTRO '77 Special Session on the State of the Art in Psychic Research, New York, N.Y. (April 19-21, 1977), UNCLASSIFIED. 12. H. Puthoff, R. Targ, and E.C. May, "Advanced Threat Technique Assessment (U)," Final Report, SRI Project 5309, Stanford Research Institute, Menlo Park, Calif. (July 1977), SECRET. 13. R. Targ, H.E. Puthoff and E.C. 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