SAICMP94.004 ;r Approved For Release 2000/08/SEDSF%TkDP96-00789ROO30SOO iq~ ILLEGIB clen national Corporation ce Applications Inter Cognitive Sciences Laboratory "~_ I Memorandum 16 February 1994 From: Dr. Edwin May Subject: Prelimina Research Results SG1J (U) This year we conducted three experiments: (1) A confirmation experiment to determine if the quality of anomalous cognition (AQ results corre- lates with the gradient of the Shannon entropy within the target. (2) A search for an event-related desynchronization in the brain in response to an AC stimulus. (3) A confirmation experiment to determine if an isolated person's skin conductance can be influenced by a remote individual. ILLEGIB ~/NF) We have observed significant effects in all three experiments. I will briefly outline the result for tch experiment and describe how it may impact operational anomalous cognition. Entropy Experiment. Three of our four receivers produced independently significant evidence for AC. The best of these had a hitting rate of 50% (chance being 20%). The effect size for the four subjects was 0.778, 0.742, 0.601, and -0.035, respectively. For comparison, the largest effect size ever seen in Ganzfeld testing is 0.354. The major result, however, is a correlation of 0.502 with 31 degrees of freedom for the gradient of the Shannon entropy with AC quality. A correlation of this magnitude is rare in psychological or behavioral studies. We are currently working through a list of potential artifacts that might have contributed to this correlation, but so far the correlation stands. This is the first time in the history of the field that a physical variable has correlated with any AC activity. It's major contribution will be to guide future researchers in choosing targets that will opti- mize the AC output. It is only a modest extension to move this laboratory result into the operation- al domain. To the degree Shannon entropy is roughly equivalent to classical thermodynamic entro- py, AC-operations can be improved by choosing intelligence target sites that are likely to possess dynamic changes of entropy (e.g., nuclear blasts, radioactive decay, radar, accelerators, etc.) - Alpha Desynchronization. A brain in "idle mode" oscillates at approximately 10 Hz. It is well known that a brain cannot remain idle and do anything else. For example, responding to a sensory stimulus (e.g., light flash, click sound, smell, touch, taste), thinking about something (e.g., counting backward from 100 or imagining your grandmother's kitchen), or moving a body part all interrupt alpha production. Therefore, it would be odd, indeed, if AC failed to interrupt alpha. Our current experiment improved upon the previous protocols from Los Alamos by including behavioral evi- dence of AC as measured in brain waves. We have observed significant evidence for AC, and the ,,-preliminary EEG analysis indicates that we may see an AC event-related desynchronization (ERD). We currently have a probability against chance of only 0.2, but we have not yet sorted the EEG data with regard to AC performance. The effect must be there. If we fail to see it after analy- sis, we will be able to quote a lower limit for the percent desynchronization. If we see an ERD, it will be the first time such an effect has been seen in AC research. The implica- tions for R&D and operations are unbounded. An immediate potential is an AC polygraph-type 1010 El Camino Real, Suite 330. Menlo Park, Calffomia94025.(415) 325-8292,(415) 325-8296 FAX SECRET/NOFORN Approved For Release 2000/08/08 : CIA-RDP96-00789ROO3300120001-2 gWe[tW 2t4/O8MC&q-RDP96-00789ROO3300120001-2 SG1 B pq? ove AC i6strument. More likely, however, is the potential use of biofeedback techniques to imPr ftmctioning for operations and R&D. A-24- Aj OA4 SG1 B 1010 El Camino Real, Suite 330. Menlo Park, California 94025. (415) 325-8292, (415) 325-8296 FAX Approved For Release 200&WfW7AiP-k&M-00789ROO3300120001-2