Robertson and Roy's study has undergone rigorous peer review and the first two parts have been published in the peer reviewed journal of the British SPR (see below) with the third having completed peer review and awaiting publication in January 2004 issue of the JSPR. Abstracts of first two
studies appended below. You need to understand that this material has been presented on this forum before but is yelled and screamed at by the closed mindeds, then ignored and when fresh open minded people come they will not be appraised of this most elementary infomation. Which, of course, is related to Cancie's Complaint that people don't read up and prefer to be influenced by others rather than research such iimportant material themselves.
What is the SPR?
Founded in 1882 by a distinguished group of Cambridge scholars, the Society for Psychical Research was the first of its kind to examine allegedly paranormal phenomena in a scientific and unbiased way. Today the Society continues with its aim of understanding events and abilities commonly described as 'psychic' or 'paranormal' by promoting and supporting important research in this area. Through the publication of scholarly reports and the organisation of educational activities, it acts as a forum for debate and promotes the dissemination of information about current developments in the field. The interdisciplinary nature of the Society's subject matter is reflected in the interests of its former presidents, which include philosophers Henry Sidgwick, C.D. Broad, Henri Bergson and H.H. Price; Prime Minister A.J. Balfour; psychologists William James and F.W.H. Myers; physicists Sir William Crookes, Sir Oliver Lodge and Lord Rayleigh; physiologist and Nobel Laureate Charles Richet; classicist Gilbert Murray; zoologist Sir Alister Hardy; and parapsychologist J.B.Rhine. (
www.spr.ac.uk/ )
ASPR
Their sister group in America was founded 3 years later in 1885 with astronomer Simon Newcomb as president, later became a branch of the British Society for Psychical Research, founded in 1882, and functioned in Boston under the guidance of Richard Hodgson, formerly of Cambridge University, until his death in 1905. A newly-organized and independent ASPR was soon thereafter established in New York with James H. Hyslop, formerly Professor of Logic and Ethics at Columbia Unversity, as its secretary and treasurer. During the years between 1906 and his death in 1920, Professor Hyslop greatly expanded the scope of the Society's work. Publication of the Journal was initiated in 1907 and has continued uninterruptedly to the present.(
http://www.aspr.com/)
The close relationship between psychic phenomena and important scientific and philosophical issues is evidenced by the fact that the investigation of such phenomena has enlisted the interest and active participation of a number of outstanding scientists and philosophers. Among the distinguished contributors of the past may be mentioned the physicists Sir William Barrett and Sir Oliver Lodge; the psychologists William James and Gardner Murphy, both of whom played major roles in the development of the ASPR. The contemporary scene in psychical research includes philosophers, psychologists and physicists, many of them on the faculty of distinguished universities and colleges here and abroad.
(
http://www.aspr.com/)
This prior discussion on this forum recently occured here:
http://www.randi.org/vbulletin/show...2&highlight=robertson+and+roy*#post1870123832
Robertson, T.J. & Roy, Archie E. A PRELIMINARY STUDY OF THE ACCEPTANCE BY NON-RECIPIENTS OF MEDIUMS' STATEMENTS TO RECIPIENTS, Journal 65, 2001, pp. 91-106. Authors' abstract: A test was made of the sceptical hypothesis that the statements made by mediums to recipients are so general that they could as readily be accepted by non-recipients. A two year study involving 10 mediums, 44 recipients and 407 non-recipients ostensibly falsified that hypothesis. The average fraction of the set of statements accepted by the recipient was significantly larger than the average fraction of the same set of statements accepted by non-recipients, the probability of the results being due to chance being 5.37x10-11 . Details are given of the procedure of data collection and analysis and an objective method of weighting the statements is described. A number of non-paranormal factors are listed and assessed as possible reasons for the seeming falsification of the hypothesis, /mental mediumship/survival/experiments/methodology/
Roy, Archie E. & Robertson, T.J. A DOUBLE-BLIND PROCEDURE FOR ASSESSING THE RELEVANCE OF A MEDIUM'S STATEMENTS TO A RECIPIENT, Journal 65, 2001, pp. 161-74. Authors' abstract: In a previous study, it was shown that a significantly higher percentage of a set of statements given by a medium to a recipient was accepted by the recipient compared with the percentage of the same set accepted by non-recipients. A number of non-paranormal factors were identified that might diminish the large gap between the acceptability levels of recipients and non-recipients. In the present paper a hard protocol is described that may be used to assess the effect of each factor separately. The protocol's single, double and triple blind nature in testing each factor is discussed, /mental mediumship/survival/experiments/methodology/
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Actually if you study the annals of both the Journal of the SPR in Britain and its American counterpart you will find lots of studies confirming the validity of mediumship as well as numerous scientifically investigated case histories.
Alongside these you will also find investigations by well known skeptics such as Susan Blackmore and Richard Wiseman debunking claims of some psychics or paranormal claims of others; Wiseman also debunked the rope trick and attempted and somewhat suceeded in debunking ghost sounds in a haunted castle. Even James Randi had a rebuttal letter published in its pages recently.
Clearly, however Robertson and Roy, will exemplify one of the largest, most statistically significant and most carefully controlled of any experimental trials/evals of mediums in history. So yes, it is eagerly awaited.