Ghostly magnetism explained
By Arran Frood
From: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3046179.stm
British psychologists have
published research findings which they believe go some way towards
explaining why people think they see or feel ghosts.
The study - in which hundreds of volunteers were taken around
two allegedly haunted locations - found that people reported
having more
unusual experiences in the specific places at each location which
are considered most haunted.
The researchers think this can be explained by the way people
react to environmental cues, such as subtle drafts, and in particular
visual factors, like low lighting.
The research also threw up evidence suggesting a link between
magnetic fields and ghostly sightings.
At both Hampton Court Palace, in Surrey, and the South Bridge
Vaults in Edinburgh, the variance in local magnetic fields was
highest in the areas thought to be most haunted, and lowest in
areas where people typically did not record experiencing ghostly
phenomena.
The variations in magnetic fields were incredibly small - about
100 times less than you get from sitting about a metre away from
your TV - but the researchers think the findings are significant.
"The correlations between ghostly activity and magnetic variance
were relatively large and tie in with laboratory findings that
suggest varying magnetic fields have a measurable effect on human
physiology," said Dr Paul Stevens, of the Koestler Parapsychology
Unit at Edinburgh University, who obtained the magnetic field measurements
at both sites.
Trial and error
Some studies have previously shown that variation in normal electromagnetic
(EM) fields, when applied to certain parts of the brain like the
temporal lobes, can result in experiences from the physical, like
being touched, to the metaphysical, such as feeling close to God.
"
When the shapes of these magnetic fields are reproduced in the
laboratory and generated across the brains of volunteers 'the sensed
presence', fear, and other experiences are reported," said
Dr Michael Persinger, of the Laurentian University, Ontario, Canada.
"However, both in the field and in the lab, the details of
the experiences are strongly affected by the expectations of the
subject as well as their sensitivity to the EM fields."
A professor of neuroscience, Persinger's results are very similar
to those just revealed in the UK by Dr Wiseman and his colleagues.
"When we measure houses where pervasive haunts occur, the
place where the occupants find they can sleep, by trial and error,
has the most consistent and normal field strengths," said
Dr Persinger.
"The high-density haunt areas, usually not more than about
one or two metres in diameter, are very electromagnetically noisy."
Further research
So does this mean that ghosts don't exist at all?
"A likely explanation is that the 'ghost' component is primarily
derived from the direct effects of the stimulation of the natural
physical events upon the observer's brain," said Dr Persinger.
"However, science is the pursuit of the unknown. There may
be stimuli present we still have to measure."
Not everyone
is so easily convinced, and they point out that the magnetic
field variation results do not explain every ghostly
phenomenon.
How for instance, can groups of people perceive the same ghost
or feel the same presence, when hallucinatory experiences are typically
individual and very subjective?
Tony Cornell, author and a paranormal researcher for over 50 years,
thinks there is some way to go.
Open mind
"Since 1852, science has been trying to find an easy answer,
and it would be nice if we had a simple answer but we do not; the
magnetic wave theory is too simple."
A vice president of the Society for Psychical Research, based
in London, he points out that the same apparitions revisit many
haunted sites - something not predicted or explained by the magnetic
wave theory.
"I'm not going to say they haven't got the answers, but these
experiments seem to be one-offs," Tony Cornell said.
"We need more repeatable answers. Scientists can switch lights
on and off, but can they switch the ghosts on and off? No they
can't."
His own experiments on magnetic fields have yielded mixed results,
though he remains optimistic that the answers are coming.
"We persevere. The answer will come eventually. An open mind
is what is always needed."
The research conducted at Hampton Court Palace and the South Bridge
Vaults is reported in the British Journal of Psychology by Dr Richard
Wiseman and colleagues.
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