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Research Lab |
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IONS’
laboratory is used for many projects,
including the exploration of nonlocal
interactions among two or more participants.
These interactions are often accompanied
by subtle changes in states of consciousness,
which can be inferred by measuring fluctuations
in participants’ physiology. Measuring
changes in brainwaves, heart rate, and
skin conductance provides a model to study
distant healing in the laboratory.
The
“senders” and the “receivers”
in these experiments are isolated from
one another. One experimental variation
tests “the feeling of being stared
at” by displaying the video image
of a receiver to a distant sender at randomly
selected times. After 30 minutes of the
sender either gazing at the receiver,
or paying attention to something else,
at randomly counterbalanced times under
double-blind conditions, the experimenter
examines the receiver’s recorded
physiology to see if the sender’s
attention affected the receiver’s
nervous system.
Research co-pioneered
by IONS’ director of research, Dr
Marilyn Schlitz, indicates that when two
people are isolated in this way, with
no normal means of communicating, the
stared-at person still shows significant
nervous system changes. This supports
the idea that even subtle shifts in intention
and attention have measurable, nonlocal
properties.
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