Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG1B Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 UNCLASSIFIF*prove ri 2002/10/21-: CIA-RDn-CMPfMjqAQ8OOO1-3 E] SECRE- CETI ff M ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET SUBJECT: (optional) FROM; EXTENSION LSR/ORD/DD/S&T Room 716 Ames F-1 NO, OAT -E --- ---- 23 November 1973 TO: (Officer designation, room number, and building) DATE RECEIVED FORWARDED OFFICER'S INITIALS COMMENTS (Number each comment to show from wh@-,m to whom. Draw a line across column ifter each commei,;.) PMS/ORD 2. SG1A 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. Approved For R+ ase 200 2/10/21 1 CIA-R[31@ 79-00999AOOO300080001-3, FORM USE PREVIOUS Fi INTERNAL 3-62 610 EDITIONS F@ SECRET CONFIDENTIAL USE ONLY UNCLASSIFIED Approved For Release 20021J@0 IMC-f IRDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 T DD/S&T 3697-73. MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence SUBJECT: Office of Research and Development and Office of Technical Service Paranormal Perception Research Project .1.@ It is recommended that a research and development investigation of paranormal perception phenomena be initiated with Stanford Re"earch Institute (SRI). A proposal for such an investigation is attached. Since this is a tightly directed advanced research project, it is further recommended that the effort be jointly funded and monitored by the Office of Research and Developm I and the Office of Technical Service. The SG11 Project Officer will he The estimated cost for the SG1A proposed effort is 2. The objectives of the proposed effort are four-fold. Approximately 50% of the effort will be directed towards the investigation of the oppor- tunities for the operational use of "gifted" individuals; twenty percent will be directed towards establishing those characteristics which will enable us to identify "gifted" subjects; twenty percent will be directed towards investigation of the neurophysiological correlates of paranormal activities; ten percent will be directed towards validation of paranormal experiments. 3. A previous OTS project, summarized in the attached proposal, indicated the existence of paranormal perception phenomena. The phenomena include remote perception of documents, objects, activities, and locations. The demonstrated reproducibility of such remote perception under controlled conditions strongly suggests these phenomena are and will continue to be interesti.ng to the intelligence community for either offensive operational exploitation or defensive threat assessment. 4. The proposed effort will be concentrated in the areas described in the Statement of Work section of the attached proposal. In summary these are: (a) Characterization of the remote perception abilities of Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RD!179-0()999*0003000800ei-S I SG1A Approved For Release 20OZ/1 0 M- '~'1:-~lA~RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 DD/S&T 3697-73 gifted subjects, with emphasis on those characteristics of most importance to intelligence matters such as resolution, information transfer rate and accuracy; (b) Correlation of physiological respon-)es to reliability and accuracy of paranormal perception; (c) Enhanceme@it of those abilities which seem to be most useful to the intelligence community; and (d) Exploration of new avenues of research discovered during the course of the program. 5. The proposed project is well suited to a joint effort by tho Office of Research and Development and the Office of Technical Service. The proposed investigation is a tightly directed advanced research project. It involves the exploration of demonstrated phenomena to determine the significance and limitations of remote perception abilities of "gifted" individuals for intelligence collections. Necessarily a parallel effort elucidating the fundamental nature of the paranormal perception phenomena is proposed. This fundamental infor@,mation is required in order to develop an orderly comprehensive program which would lead to the basic understand- ing essential for the full exploitation of the phenomena for intelligence activities. It is expected that the combination of attitudes and experi- ences represented by OTS and ORD will produce timely relevant results and insure an objective assessment of the significance of those results. 6. The recommended project should be completed by Stanford Research Institute. SRI has produced some of the most significant investigations in paranormal phenomena. This has occurred because of the philosophies and abilities of the principal investigators. These investigators have established competence in the physical sciences and in para normal phenomena research. They have been responsive to past OTS directives and are willing to investigate intelligence related applications. SRI has given these invest 'igators the institutional integrity and facilities necessary to achieve creditable research in both the public and a more restrictive private domain. 7., Although the controversy associated with paranormal research may create some unique security problems, they are not insurmountable. These problems include embarrassment of being involved in an assumed fraud; the potential adverse propaganda associated with the use of psychic mind altering or control techniques, and the fact that some subjects may be of questionable stability. These potential problems can be controlled Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/2,t?,, P79-00999AO00300080001-3 36@!7-73 br-,cause of 0e rotivatlm and intoqrity of the principal ibot-h t"I" tnam Vle In,,;titiAd sol i@.I r; 1,10-atic"ns I" 6',.rive wkic.11 01, VC,"air !,upp-Ort fro@m projccts. j" f i vv r@ mt r@ , i 14. 1 , , . @; @ I V vtith fraueulont of J*,cor 0""IM i).SSOI@I. At, UA wou ttj 01., to thie cari.-ors of ti iovestli@,@tors zi@nt,"; z'J"K, cret:lit)ility ot ",@w 1w '-'-i tate. Fri, 'Lids, ef r t, W11", r;Cc-o!.wiend a level cctitract, Wr, r(yv0n flexible to ot*iac @-(!curi*ty arraw.-ic-@,oc,nts whicil could t!n as M-Ce:,.',SarY. SG1 I t UI x- Di rector Distribution: Original & I- Addressee 1- PMS/ORD 1- CMG/0-fS I- Executive Registry 1- OPPB 2- DD/S&T Registry 1- B&A/ORD 1- B&F/0'rS I - LSR/ORD File I- CWTS File I - LSR/0aD Chrono I - CB/OTS Chrono I - ORD Chrono I 1 LSR/ORD/DD/S&T - w n n A e, a t C- (23 November 1973) 3 Approved For Release 2002110/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG113 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Next 11 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved Approved ' 2LlWEJ . 'VF5&4ffiffA P "DP79-00999AOOO 11/23/73 TO: D/OTS OTS-Registry- ROOM NO. BUILDING REMARKS: -ROM: LSR/ORD @or`kllt?ase @ dO@tk2l - -CIA---RD---P-79- -6-60-0-A-00-3- REPLACES FORM 36-B (47) 10-24 WHICH MAY BE USED. @55 0080001-3 0080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG113 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/ t(RDP79-00999A000300080001-3 DD/S&T 3697-73 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence SUBJECT: Office of Research and Development and Office of Technical Service Paranormal Perception Research Project 1. It is recommended that a research and development investigation of paranormal perception phenomena be initiated with Stanford Research Institute (SRI). A proposal for such an investigation is attached. Since this is a tightly directed advanced research project, it is further recommended that the effort be jointly funded and monitored by the Office of Research and Develop ent and the Offio) of Technical Service. The 11 Project Officer will bel The estimated cost for the BA proposed effort isi 2. The objectives of the proposed effort are four-fold. Approximately 50% of the effort will be directed towards the investigation of the oppor- tunities for the operational use of "gifted" individuals; twenty percent will be directed towards establishing those characteristics which will enable us to identify "gifted" subjects; twenty percent will be directed towards investigation of the neurophysiological correlates of paranormal activities; ten percent will be directed towards validation of paranormal experiments. 3. A previous OTS project, summarized in the attached proposal, indicated the existence of paranormal perception phenomena. The phenomena include remote perception of documents, objects, activities, and locations. The demonstrated reproducibility of such remote perception under controlled conditions strongly suggests these phenomena are and will continue to be interesti.ng to the intelligence community for either offensive operational exploitation or defensive threat assessment. 4. The proposed effort will be concentrated in the areas described in the Statement of Work section of the attached proposal. In summary these are:. (a) Characterization of the remote perception abilities of Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP 03oonnooi SG1A Approved For Release 2002/10/21";.CIA-~,RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 DD/S&T 3697-73 gifted subjects, with emphasis on those characteristics of most importance to intelligence matters such as resolution, information transfer rate and accuracy; (b) Correlation of physiological responses to reliability and accuracy of paranormal perception; (c) Enhancement of those abilities which seem to be most useful to the intelligence community; and (d) Exploration of new avenues of research discovered during the course of the program. 5. The proposed project is well suited to a joint effort by the Office of Research and Development and the Office of Technical Service. The proposed investigation is a tightly directed advanced research project. It involves the exploration of demonstrated phenomena to determine the significance and limitations of remote perception abilities of "gifted" individuals for intelligence collections. Necessarily a parallel effort elucidating the fundamental nature of the paranormal perception phenomena is proposed. This fundamental information is required in order to develop an orderly comprehensive program which would lead to the basic understand- ing essential for the full exploitation of the phenomena for intelligence activities. It is expected that the combination of attitudes and experi- ences represented by OTS and ORD will produce timely relevant results and insure an objective assessment of the significance of those results. 6. The recommended project should be completed by Stanford Research Institute. SRI has produced some of the most significant investigations in paranormal phenomena. This has occurred because of the philosophies and abilities of the principal investigators. These investigators have established competence in the physical sciences and in paranormal phenomena research. They have been responsive to past OTS directives and are willing to investigate intelligence related applications. SRI has given these investigators the institutional integrity and facilities necessary to achieve creditable research in both the public and a more restrictive private domain. 7.@ Although the controversy associated with paranormal research may create some unique security problems, they are not insurmountable. These problems include embarrassment of being involved in an assumed fraud; the potential adverse propaganda associated with the use of psychic mind altering or control techniques, and the fact that some subjects may be of questionable stability. These potential problems can be controlled Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/2f,--@'@ PP79-00999AO00300080001-3 PIA:7P "We'" 1_1 SaT 36'7-73 Vj ty of tiie pri 1,.ci,,,)- I i nvesti "ors beceuse of the rativation tnd intj@@ 11 Soth the investiqators, ena tha In,.t,;t1jte Solid rel,utatl Otis derive mucit of their support TrM proj-,-tcts. InYcAve, With fra4dalcnt rv4l ici-tion 0 psor opert association wi-61 CIA v,@c,@,fla L@.:,,% (.ClIeWritris to the carti.2rs of al investiqators and the cre,dibi'lity cr.@ t,,,110 ltvs-'LALUtip. Ff',r tilis 0-1"'L@rz, we reconriend a SiLU"El"r level tut rrv@.@in flexibie to ot@ioi, @;acuritk@ arrangements which ccvold t@e Vitple@@ieiited as c1f,Zmed neco@sary. SG1 I ;_iencll nQ Technology APPROVED: SICKED _ F"., - - - _1 ;- Col Y Director Distribution: Original & I-Addressee 1- PMS/ORD I- CMG/OTS 1- Executive Registry I- OPPB 2- DD/S&T Registry 1- B&A/ORD 1- B&F/OTS 1- LSR/ORD File 1- CB/01"S File I- LSR/ORD Chrono I- CB/OTS Chrono 1- ORD Chrono 1- OTS Chrona LSR/ORD/DD/S&T:i 0 DEG 19, 3 Clate (23 November 1973) Approved For Release 2002/40/21 :4CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 proved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 LL I October 1973 Proposal for Research SRI No. ISH 73-146 PERCEPTUAL AUGMENTATION TECHNIQUES Part One--Technical Proposal Prepared by: 0 RZ D Harold E. Puthoff Senior Research Engineer Russell Targ Senior Research Physicist Approved: Earle D. Jones, Diret-tdr Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory Bonnar Cox, Executive Director Information Science and Engineering Division Copy No. Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 CONTENTS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LIST OF TABLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv I INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I Il BACKGROUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 A. Exploratory Research in Remote Viewing . . . . . . . . 3 1. Global Targets--Training Mode . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. Demonstration-of-Ability Tests: Double-Blind Client-Supplied Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . 6 B@ EEG Experiments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' 18 C@ Remote Perception of Graphic Material . . . . . . . . . 23 III PROPOSED PROGRAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 A. Objective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 B. Technical Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 C@ Statement of Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 D, Reporting Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 IV QUALIFICATIONS OF STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUrE . . . . . . . 43 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 ILLUSTRATIONS I 2 3 el 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Training Results (Swann) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Map No. 1 of West Virginia Site (Swann) . . . . . . . . . . 8 Map No. 2 of West Virginia Site (Detail--Swann) . . . . . . 9 Map of Urals Site (Price) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Map No. I of Kerguelen Island Site (Detail--Swann) . . . . . 14 Map No. 2 of Kerguelen Island Site (Swann) . . . . . . . . . 15 Map No. 3 of Kerguelen Island Site (Price) . . . . . . . . . 17 Occipital EEG Frequency Spectra, 0 to 25 Hz, of Jean Mayo, Receiver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Occipital EEG Frequency Spectra, 0 to 25 Hz, of liella Hammid, Receiver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Shielded Room Used for EEG Measurements . . . . . . . . . . 24 Target 1 (Firecracker) and Geller's Responses . . . . . . . 25 Target 2 (Grapes) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . . . . 27 Target 3 (Devil) and Geller's Rc3ponses . . . . . . . . . . 28 Target 4 (Solar System) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . 31 Target 5 (Camel) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Target 6 (Golden Gate Bridge) and Geller's Response 34 Target 7 (Seagull Flying) and Geller's Response . . . . . . 35 Target 8 (Kite on CRT Display) and Geller's Response . . . . 36 Target 9 (Church, Stored in Memory of Text-Editing Computer) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Target 10 (Arrow Through Heart, Stored in Computer Graphics Program) and Geller's Responses . . . . . . . . . . 39 iii Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 TABLE I Results of Global Targets Training--Run 10 . . . . . . . . . 5 iv Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO0030'0080001-3 I INTRODUCTION Stanford Research Institute proposes to undertake a one-year research program to investigate, and develop techniques to enhance, human percep- tual abilities.* The perceptual abilities that we have been investigating for the past year are sometimes considered paranormal phenomena. However, our recetit work leads us to consider them as, to a greater or lesser extent, lateat in all people. The phenomena we have investigated most exten- sively pertain to the ability of certain individuals to view with great clarity distant scenes not presented to any known perceptual sense. In addition, we have performed more modest experiments with unselected sub- jects who have been found to exhibit direct physiological (EEG) evidence of perception of remote happenings. Our accumulated data make it appear that both gifted and ordinary persons can be assisted in developing remote perceptual abilities up to a level dictated by their individual potentialities. The purpose of the pr oposed research is to investigate the physical and psychological variables underlying these phenomena so that we may gain a greater understanding of this ability and a more com- plete grasp of its limits and applicability. Section 11 of this proposal provides background material, detailing the evidence pertaining to remote viewing and other nonregular percep- Ll tual abilities. In this section we describe: 0 Experiments with two gifted individuals who took part in double-blind experiments to perceive scenes at intercon- tinental distances. 0 Brain wave experiments in which ordinary (not specially selected) subjects were asked to perceive whether or not a remote light was flashing--the EEG data from several of W W these subjects indicates objectively that they did perceive the presence of the light, even if only at a noncognitive level of their consciousness. This proposal has been prepared at the request of the client. Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 ri L, Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 11 BACKGROUND A. Exploratory Research in Remote Viewi ALS a -result of exnerimentation carried out in an eight-month program to investigate the abilities of a gifted subject, Ingo Swann, Swann ex- pressed the opinion that the insights obtained had strengthened an ability that has been researched before he joined the SRI program; namely, the ability to view remote locations. To test Swann's assertion, SRI re- searchers set up a series of experimental protocols on a gradient scale of increasing difficulty. The first step toward the proof that such an ability might exist in principle was completed in our laboratory in a series of experiments with another subject in which target pictures were successfully received where the subject was separated from the target material either by an electrically isolated shielded room or by the isolation provided by East-coast/West-coast distances. These data are presented in Part C of this section. 1. Global Targets--Training Mode For the first experimentY considered to be a training mode, 1.00 targets on the earth's surface (ten per day for ten days) were chosen at random, often by different experimenters. For each ten-trial session, the experiment would begin with the subject (Swann) being given a target location by latitude and longitude only, for which he had to provide an immediate response of what he saw. Following his response, some brief indication was given as to whether any correspondence existed between his description and the target location. The next coordinate was then given until all ten coordinates were exhausted. A run of ten coordinates was always completed in less than 30 minutes. The results obtained during the training mode are summarized in Figure 1, where a least-squares fit to the data is shown by the solid lines. Details for the final run (Run 10) are shown in Table 1. The second coordinate in Run 10 (Table 1) affords a surprising example of precision that sometimes occurred. The experimenter chose 3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 10 8 HITS/RUN 6 out of 10 trials/run 4 2 0 8 LESSER 6 CORRESPONDENCES/ RUN out of 4 10 trials/run 2 0 0 0 6 MISSES/RUN 4 out of 10 trials/run 2 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 RUN NUMBER SA-2613-1 FIGURE 1 TRAINING RESULTS (SWANN) 4 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Table I RESULTS OF GLOBAL TARGETS TRAINING--RUN 10 Target Response Evaluation 45'N 150OW Ocean, beautiful blue-green waves, sun H (Ocean) shining, ship toward north 20S WE Sense of speeding over water, landing H (eastern shore, Lake on land. Lake to west, high elevation Victoria, Africa) 55'N 1500E Not many trees, patches of snow, marsh? M (Sea of Okhotsk) 640N 19OW Volcano to southwest. I think I'm over H (20 miles ENE of Ocean. Mt. Hekla volcano, Iceland) 55'N 130'E Wind blowing there, night, telephone N (Soviet Union) wires. Land, flat place with fields; Cold. 60'N 90OW Open water, stands of pine to north. H (Hudson Bay) 60ON 91'E City, snow on ground, city to north- N (Soviet Union) east, factory to south. 300S .00 Ocean, Atlantic, deep blue water. H (Ocean)- 42'N 1050 Mountains H (Gobi) 280S 137'E Islands, Land mass to east, west. H (Lake Eyre, Australia) An open sea, night. H--Hit; good description@of area in near vicinity of target. N--Neutral; some possibility of correspondence. M--Miss; clear lack of correspondence. 5 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 the coordinate from a world map to represent the middle of Lake Victoria5l Africa. However, Swann insisted that the coordinate, when given, turned on a picture of land to the right of a large lake. Subsequent checking with a detailed map of the region indicated that his perception had been correct. We must, of course, point out that the results of such it train- ing mode can be taken as indicative only, since even under the carefully controlled experimental conditions in force, 0 An individual could--in principle--obtain good results on the basis of eidetic memory. 0 Given the hypothesis of extraordinary functioning an individual could--in principle--obtain the data subliminally from an experimenter who knows the target location. Therefore, the rapid global targets training mode was followed up with a series of global targets supplied by Stanford Research Institute personnel on a double-blind basis in which detail was obtained on build- ings, roads, bridges, and the like. The results were sufficiently ac- curate to lead us to propose the client-controlled demonstration-of- ability tests described in the following paragraphs. The final evaluation rests on the analysis of the double-blind targets used in the concluding demonstration-of-ability tests. 2. Demonstration-of-Ability Tests: Double-Blind Client-Supplied Coordinates In order to subject the remote viewing phenomena to a rigorous test under control of the client, a request for coordinates was trans- mitted to the client. In response, SRI personnel received the first set of coordinates, hereafter referred to as the West Virginia Site. a. West Virginia Site (Swann) Date: 29 May 1973Y 1634-1640Y Menlo Park, California Protocol: Coordinates 38023' given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to initiate experiment. No maps subject wAs asked to give an session was recorded on video 6 45-48"Ny 79025' 00"W subject I. Swann to were permitted and the immediate response. The tape. Approved For Release'2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Swann response: This seems to be some sort of mounds or rolling hills. There is a city to the north (I can see the taller buildings and some smog). This seems to be a strange place, somewhat like the lawns that one would find around a military base, but I get the impression that there are either some old bunkers around, or maybe this is a covered reservoir. There must be a flagpole, some highways to the west, possibly a river over to the far east, to the south more city. The map of Figure 2 was drawn. On the following morning, Swann submitted a written re- port of a second reading, dated 30 May 1973, 0735-0758, Mountain View, California. Cliffs to the east, fence to the north. There's a circular building (a tower?), buildings to the south. Is this a former Nike base or something like that? This is about as far as I could go without feedback, and perhaps guidance as to what was wanted. There is something strange about this area, but since I don't know particularly what to look for within the scope of the cloudy ability, it is extremely difficult to make decisions on what is there and what is not. Imagination seems to get in the way. (For example, I seem to get the impression of some- thing underground, but I'm not sure.) However, it is apparent thaz. on first sighting the general location was correctly spotted. The map of Figure 3 was drawn. b. West Virginia Site (Price) As a back-up testl the coordinates were given to a second subject (Price) who appears to possess similar ability in casual testing. The task was presented to the second subject independently of the first, both to prevent collaboration and to prevent any sense of competition. Date: 1 June 1973, 1700, Menlo Park, California Protocol: Coordinates 38023' 45-48"N, 79025' 00"W given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject Price by telephone to initiate experiment. 7 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 jww- I FIGURE 2 MAP NO. 1 OF WEST VIRGINIA SITE (SWANN) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 8 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 ro Q Itwz "It C- to, ri FIGURE 3 MAP NO. 2 OF WEST VIRGINIA SITE (DETAIL-SWANN) 9 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 On the morning of 4 June 1973 Price's written response (dated 2 June 1973, 1250-1350., Lake Tahoe, California) was received in the mail. Looked at general area from altitude of about 1500' above highest terrain. On my left forward quadrant is a peak in a chain of mountainsl elevation approximately 4996' above sea level. Slopes are greyish slate covered with variety of broad leaf trees, vines, shrubbery, and undergrowth. I am facing about 30-50 west of north. Looking down the mountain to the right (east) side is a roadway, freeway country style--curves around base of mountain from S.W.--swings north for a few miles, then heads E.N.E. to a fairly large city about 30-40 miles dis- tant. This area was a battleground in civil war--low rolling hills, creeks, few lakes or reservoirs. There is a smaller town a little S.E. about 15-20 miles distant with small settle- ments, village type, very rural, scattered around. Looking across the peak, 2500-3000' mountains stretch out for a hundred or so miles. Area is essentially wooded. Some of the westerly slopes are eroded and gully washed--looks like strip mining, coal mainly. Weather at this time is cloudy, rainy. Temperature at my alti- tude about 540--high cumulo nimbus clouds to about 25,000- 30,000'. Clear area, but turbulent, between that level and some cirro stratus at 46,000'. Air mass in that strip moving W.N.W. to S.E. 1318 - Perceived that peak area has large underground storage areas. Road comes up back side of mountains (west slopes), fairly well concealed, looks deliberately so. It's cut under trees where possible--would be very hard to detect flying over area. Looks like former missile site--bases for launchers still there., but area now houses record storage area, microfilml file cabinets; as you go into underground area through aluminum rolled up doors, first areas filled with recordsY etc. Rooms about 100' long, 40' wide, 20' ceilings with concrete supporting pilasters., flare-shaped. Temperature cool--fluorescent lighted. Personnel., Army 5th Corps Engineers. M/Sgt. Long on desk plac- ard on grey steel desk--file cabinets security locked--combina- tion locks, steel rods through eye bolts. Beyond these rooms, heading east, are several bays with computers,, communication equipment, large maps, display type, overlays. Personnel, Army Signal Corps. Elevators. 10 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 1330 - Looked over general area from original location again-- valleys quite ha.zy, lightning about 30 miles north along moun- tain ridge. Temperature drop about 60, it's about 480. Looking for other significances: see warm air mass moving in from S.W. colliding with cool air mass about 100 miles E.S.E. from my viewpoint. Air is very turbulent--tornado type; birds in my area seeking heavy cover. There is a fairly large river that I can see about 15-20 miles north and slightly west; runs N.E.; then curves in wide valley running S.W. to N.E.; river then runs S.E. Area to east, low rolling hills. Quite a few Civil War monuments. A marble colonnade type: 11 In this area was fought the battle of Lynchburg where many brave men of the Union and Confederate Armys (sic) fell. We dedicate this area to all peace loving people of the future--Daughters G.A.R." On a later date Price was asked to return to the West Virginia site with the goal of obtaining codeword information,, if pos- sible. In responseY Price supplied the following information: Top of desk had papers labeled: Flytrap Minerva File cabinet on north wall labeled: Operation Pool --- Ond word unreadable) Folders inside cabinet labeled: Cueball 14 Ball 4 Ball 8 Ball Rackup Name of site vaguely seems like Hayfork or Haystack. Personnel: Col. R. J. Hamilton Maj. Gen. George R. Nash Major John C. Calhoun?? C. Urals Site (Price) After obtaining a reading on the West Virginia site, Price volunteered that he scanned the other side of the globe for a Bloc equiv- alent, and found one in the Urals at 65'00'57"N, 59059'59"E,, described as follows. Elevation) 6200'. Scrubby brush, tundra type ground hummocks, rocky outcroppings, mountains with fairly steep slopes. Facing 11 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 north, about 60 miles ground slopes to marshland. Mountain chain runs off to right about 35" east of north. Facing south, mountains run fairly north and south. Facing west)- mountains drop down to foothills for 60 miles or so; some rivers running roughly north. Facing east, mountains are rather abrupt.9 dropping to rolling hills and to flat land. Area site under- ground, reinforced concrete, doorways of steel of the roll-up type. Unusually high ratio of women to men, at least at night. I see some helipads, concrete. Light rail tracks run from pads to another set of rails that parallel the doors into the mountain (see Figure 4). Thirty miles north (50 west of north) of the site is a radar installation with one large (165') dish and two small fast-track dishes. The above reports were submitted to the client for evalua- tion. A second set of coordinates was requested and obtained,,,hereafter referred to as the Kerguelen Island Site. lipads MOUNTAIN FACE FIGURE 4 MAP OF URALS SITE (PRICE) 12 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 d. Kerguelen Island Site (Swann) Date: 21 July 1973, 1708-1730, Menlo Park, California Protocol: Coordinates 49020'S., 70014'E given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject I. Swann to initiate experi- ment. No maps were permitted and the subject was asked to give an immediate response. The session was recorded on video tape. Swann response: My initial response is that it's an island., maybe a mountain sticking up through a cloud cover. (Experimenter checks, gives positive feedback.) Terrain seems rocky. Must be some sort of small plants growing there. Cloud bank to the west. Very cold. I see some buildings rather mathematically laid out. One of them is orange. There is something like a radar antenna, a round disc. (Subject draws map during report.) Two white cy- lindrical tanks, quite large. To the northwest a small airstrip. Wind is blowing. Must be two or three trucks in front of build- ing. Behind, is that an outhouse? There's not much there. That's all, I think, for now. Swann submits map, Figure 5. On the following day, 1152-1215, the identical protocol was followed for a second reading. Again, no maps were permitted. During this reading, Swann described following the coastline of the island, drawing segments on 8-1/2" 1/ 11" pieces of paper as he went, resulting in Figure 6 when the pieces were assembled. It's not completely dark there, sort of orangish light. If I look to the west, hills; to the north flatlands and, I think, airstrip and ocean in the distance; to the east, rolling bumpy grasslands with bumps; to the south is -- I can't see anything to the south. I move north to the coastline and follow it around. That's point A (begins to draw map). Point B, rocks sticking up out of the ocean, breakers on them. Point C, little cluster of buildings with wharf, boats. Point D, jutty of land sticking out. Point F* is sand basin,, river coming through, Lettering out of order. 13 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SECTION L DETAIL! FIGURE 5 MAP NO. 1 OF KERGUELEN ISLAND SITE (DETAIL-SWANN) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 k 9A L.L Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 2 'D SCAM 4TE ?Zou@ 1177, IIA2 - 11,15 ?opt 14, FIGURE 6 MAP NO. 2 OF KERGUELEN ISLAND SITE (SWANN) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 lots of birds. Point E, brush of small trees. This is fun (laughs), first time I've ever done this. (Following E) almost a straight coastline, cuts in rocks, beach. Then curves back. I see to northwest a mountain rising, snow on top. Area G is irregular. Point 11 is a high cliff, Point I is a promontory. Point J has big breakers, K is a bay, L is area I drew yester- day (circles area, draws airstrip and buildings for orientation to previous map). That will do for today. May be a lighthouse (on tip?). I lacked courage going around Point G. e. Kerguelen Island Site (Price) Date: 20 Jul 1973Y 1400, Menlo Park California y Y Protocol: Coordinates 49020'S,- 70014'E given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject Price by telephone to initiate experiment. Price Response: On the morning of 21 July 1973 Price's written response (dated 20 July 1973, 2055-2232, Santa Clara, California) was received (hand carried). Picked 15,.000' altitude. Looking south., 40 east of south, see a site located on a cliff about 200' high above the ocean. In:-- stallation is a cluster of buildings and radar tracking station (see Figure 7). Radar is a segment concave type rather than circular dish type. Building #1 is the largest, L-shaped, front facing NW, two stories plus basement. Buildings #2 and #3 about 75'-100' east of main building, also two stories plus basement. Building #2 has recreation and dining facilities,, building #3 contains living quarters. Building #4 is a shop and maintenance area. Buildings are all interconnected on the ground floor. I see a dock area at the base of the cliff, and 1/4 to 1/2 mile from the buildings is an airstrip. The installation has four functions: 1) Tracking (space) 2) Meteorological station 3) Monitoring equipment for radiation readings 4) Radio relay station. I see a couple of other radar installations covered by geodesic domes. There are two small tracking radars interlinked with main radar. 16 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 FIGURE 7 MAP NO. 3 OF KERGUELEN ISLAND SITE (PRICE) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I had -@.ne impression that the personnel (military and civilian) were French, but since I could understand what was being said I assume personnel are American. f. Analvsis of I-'(--;ults (Double-Blind Client Coordinates) The results obtained with the double-blind client coordi- nates have been evaluated separately by the client. (See attached supplement.) As an additional control with regard to the experimental protocol ', SRI personnel have not been informed before, during,, or after- ward of any details of the target series parameters, including the hit- miss profile. However, SRI personnel have been informed that in each experiment there have been at least some categories of information in which the data exceed any possible bounds of coincidental correlation,, and exceed any possible bounds of acquisition by known means. It has also been reported that some of the data possibly constitute "noise" in the signal.,, but it has usually been difficult to negate totally any information given by the subjects. that: Therefore, we conclude from this portion of the study ~ A channel. exists whereby information about a remote location can be obtained in the manner described. ~ As with all biological systems the information channel appears to be imperfectY containing some noise along with the signal. ~ While a signal-to-noise ratio cannot as yet be determined by SRI personnel with regard to client- controlled targets,, a semiquantitative signal-to- noise ratio might be determined with additional experimental effort. 13. EEG Experiments One premise underlying our investigation is that paranormal func- tioning is distributed throughout the population in much the same manner as every other ability, and indeed in much the same way as intelligence 18 Approved For Release 2002/10M : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 is distributed. We further conjecture that it is partially the 11 world view" of the times in which we live that prevents paranormal ability from surfacing to a greater extent. Our EEG program was initiated in an effort to determine whether objective physiological measures of paranormal functioning exist and to relieve the subject from the burden of having to demonstrate voli- tionally any sort of paranormal functioning. We inform our subjects that a light is to be flashed from time to time in a distant room, and if they perceive that light it may be evident from changes in their EEG output. This experiment tests the hypothesis that perception may take place and be measurable at noncognitive levels of consciousness, even though not easily expressed verbally. In our work with four female volunteer subjects, we have found evidence in three of their EEG spectra that they are influenced by the remote stimulus. Thus it appears from this exploratory work that we have a repeatable perception experiment that yields significant results even with unselected subjects. The experimental protocol for the experiment is as follows: A subject is seated in a shielded EEG monitoring room in the Life Sciences Building of SRI. A friend of the subject is seated in a remote room with the stimulus generator, in this case a strobe light. The EEG out- put is recorded from the vertexes and occiputs (regions of the brain) simultaneously from both participants. On each trial., a tone burst precedes by one second a ten-second train of flashes presented to one of the subjects designated as the "sender." The subject who does not see the flashes is designated the "receiver;" this subject also hears the warning signal. This signal evokes a contingent negative variation (CNV) in each of the subjects as they anticipate the occurrence.of the flashes. Thirty-six such trials are given, each consisting of 12 null trials, i.e., 0 flashes/second, 12 6-Hz flashes, and 12 16-Hz flashes intermixed in a random order. Each of the 36 trials consists of a ten-second EEG epoch. The EEG data are recorded on magnetic tape and digitized. The 12 data blocks associated with.the 0, 6, and 16 Hz trials are averaged. A spectral analysis is then performed on the average. This analysis has given two types of results. In two subjects we have evidence of actual modulation of the EEG output at the flash fre- quency. The other (more consistent) observation is that the dominant alpha production of the resting subjects is pulled to higher frequencies during the 6- and 16-Hz trials as compared with the 0 flashes/second trials. 19 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 In summary, the "receiver" subject knows when a trial period is beginning but does not know whether the light will be flashed nor what the flash frequency will be. However, from the accumulated EEG data, we tentatively conclude that there is evidence strongly suggesting that human subjects can directly--even though noncognitively--perceive remote stimuli not presented to any known perceptual sense, and the perception event can be recorded by an objective process. Figure 8 shows the averaged EEG for a subject attempting to perceive the remote stimulus. In this case the twelve averaged trials are for the 6- and 16-Hz light. The spectrum indicates a significant (p = 0.05) in- crease in the 16-Hz component during the 16-11z period. Figure 9(a) shows an overlay of the three averaged spectra for a different subject. Figure 9(b) shows the difference spectrum where the 0 trials data are electrically subtracted from the 6-Hz data. This difference curve shows a clear frequency shift in the dominant component of the subject's alpha (9-11 Hz) production. Of our four subjects, this subject had by far the most monochromatic EEG spectrum. Again the fre- quency shift obtained from comparing the stimulus versus nonstimulus trials was significant at the p = 0.05 level for the 6-Hz case and at the p = 0.005 level for the 16-11z case. A second important use of the EEG technique is to allow a deter- mination to be made of what confidence level to place on what a subject reports that he is perceiving during the course of his remote viewing experience. Subjects taking part in these EEG experiments are asked to indicate their conscious feelings, on a trial-by-trial basis, as to which stimulus is being generated. They make their guess known to the experimenter via one-way telegraphic communication. An analysis of these guesses has shown a-correlation between the correct calls and certain characteristic changes in EEG output. These changes vary from subject to subject but appear to be constant for any one subject. Having observed this apparent correlation in exploratory work,, it is important to continue this study further to determine its constancy. In experiments with Swann, the correlation took the form of a de- crease in monochromaticity of his alpha production when his verbal re- sponses to a stimulus condition were correct. (In this experiment Swann was asked to determine whether a remote helium-neon laser was on or off.) In the course of this experiment there was thus an apparent correlation between the accuracy of his perception and his EEG production, even though his overall task performance in this particular experiment did not differ significantly from chance expectation. 20 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 @5 ZD (a) SENDER STIMULATED WITH 6-Hz FLASHES eo (b1 SENDER STIMULATED WITH 16-Hz FLASHES FIGURE 8 OCCIPITAL EEG FREQUENCY SPECTRA, 0 TO 25 Hz, OF JEAN MAYO, RECEIVER 21 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 -0 6 16 5 ii, 11, 15 Hz 20 ilz (a) THREE CASES--O-, 6-, AND 16-Hz FLASHES (12-TRIAL AVERAGE) 11 !iz (b) DIFFERENCE SPECTRA-6-Hz MINUS 0-Hz FIGURE 9 OCCIPITAL EEG FREQUENCY SPECTRA, 0 TO 25 Hz, OF HELLA HAMMID, RECEIVER Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 In oc-rier work with Swann at the American Society for Psychical Research, Dr. Karlis Osis has reported that when Swann attempted to reproduce oictorially the contents of a hidden container, hia EEG out- put would consistently shift from lower to higher frequencies. Swann was highly successful (eight out of eight) in this series of perception experimen-cs. It therefore appears that monitoring of the EEG may prove to be a good indicator as to the measure of confidence that should be placed in a subject's report about his perception of a remote scene. C. Remote Perception of Graphic Material The objective of this group of experimental sessions was to inves- tigate the apparent paranormal perception ability of gifted subject Uri Geller under carefully controlled conditions with the goal of under- standing the physical and psychological variables underlying such ability. On each day of an eight-day experimental period, picture drawing experiments were carried out. In these experiments, Geller was separated from the target material either by an electrically isolated, shielded room or by the isolation provided by having the targets drawn on the East Coast. As a result of Geller's success in this experimental period, we consider that he has demonstrated his paranormal perceptual ability in a convincing and unambiguous manner. Saturday, 4 August--Two drawing experiments were conducted this day. In. both of these, Geller was closeted in an opaque, acoustically and electrically shielded room. This room is the double-walled shielded room used for EEG research in the Life Sciences Division of SRI. It is locked by means of an inner and outer door, each of which is secured with a refrigerator-type locking mechanism, as shown in Figure 10. The two drawings used in this experiment were selected by randomly opening a large college dictionary and selecting the first word that could reasonablv be drawn. The first word obtained in this manner was if fuse" and the object drawn was firecracker [Figure 11(a)]. All target selection and picture drawing was done with Geller already in the shielded room. Geller was notified via intercom when the target picture was drawn and taped to the wall outside his enclosure. He was continuously moni- tored by a one-way audio circuit. 23 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 0 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I 24 i Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 0 M RESPONSE I Az;c r (c) RESPONSE 2 FIGURE 11 TARGET 1 (FIRECRACKER) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES 25 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Geller's almost immediate response was that he saw "a cylinder with noise coming out of it." His drawing representing his response to the target was a drum, along with a number of other cylindrical-looking objects [Figures 11(b) and 11(c)]. The second word selected was "bunch , and the target was a bunch of grapes. Geller's immediate response was that lie saw I Idrops of water coming out of the picture." He then talked about "purple circles." Finally, he said that he was quite sure that lie had the picture. His drawing was indeed a bunch of grapes. Both the target picture and Geller's rendition had 24 grapes in the bunch (Figure 12). In this work the target picture is never discussed by the experi- menters after the picture is drawn or brought near the shielded room. The intercom operates only from the inside of the room to the outside, except when the push-to-talk switch is depressed on the outside of the room. In our detailed examination of the shielded room and the protocol used in these experiments no sensory leakage has been found,, nor has any defect in the protocol been brought to our attention. Sunday, 5 August--Geller is locked in the shielded room with one experimenter outside as a monitor while the target is drawn in the other experimenter's office about a half mile away. The target selected from the dictionary was an outline drawing of a man, which evolved through the drawing process into a devil with a trident [Figure 13(a)]. To start the experimentY Puthoff, who was with Geller, called Targ, who was with the drawing. Geller spent almost a half-hour working on the drawing before "passing," as he felt unable to get the drawing. We in- clude his efforts nonetheless for the insight into the process that they provide. His drawings [Figures 13(b)-13(d)] were as follows: It 11 ~ Moses' Tablets , i.e.1 Ten Commandments. ~ Apple with a worm coming out of it., a snake was in the same picture, and.the Tablets symbolism of the first drawing. ~ Composite picture with the Ten Commandments on top of the world and the trident on the outside, along with a neatly drawn leaf. One is led to speculate that the Biblical representation in these three drawings is perhaps associational material triggered by the target. The inability on Geller's part to draw the devil may be culturally induced. 26 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 AV (b) RESPONSE FIGURE 12 TARGET 2 (GRAPES) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 fa) TARGET 11,111.1111W 11,036" "'W 1""u ti-ML Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 W 00 if @N (a) TARGET (b) RESPONSE 1 FIGURE 13 TARGET 3 (DEVIL) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Ir L-J- Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 N W RESPONSE 2 W RESPONSE 3 FIGURE 13 TARGET 3 (DEVIL) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES (Concluded) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 With regard to the target picture., Geller did draw the trident from the target picture, but he did not draw the man who was holding it. From this it seems clear that Geller does not simplv copy lines from the target picture, but rather he apparently performs some mental pro- cessing before drawing them. The second target picture was drawn by an experimenter while he was inside the shielded room with Geller outside the room with another experimenter. In this case the target [Figure 14(a)] was a reoresenta.- tion of the solar system. His immediate verbal reaction before drawing C' was one of space. Teller's drawn response to the target while outside the room [Figure 14(b)] coincides well with the target drawing. The block in the center of Geller's picture,, according to his statement, was his afterthought suggested by the movie 2 001 and was drawn as an addition just before comparing target with response. Monday, 6 August--The experiment to be clone this day was a pure clairvovance task. A picture was drawn by a scientist outside the usual experimental group. The picture was locked in the shielded room before Geller's arrival at SRI. Geller was then led by the experimenters to the shielded room, and asked to draw the picture inside the room. He drew a number of pictures, all of which he rejected as not being appli- cable. He said that he got no clear impression and passed. The target was a rabbit, and nothing Cleller drew in any way resembled a rabbit. It should be added that the picture was drawn by a scientist of whom Gel@er is not fond and Geller asked at the ontset if this was the case. , The experimenters said that this-was not the case ', since they did not know who had drawn the picture. Geller felt vindicated to some extent when he found out that his initial guess a-, to the artist had been correct. luesday_,_7 August--This day two target pictures were attempted with Geller in the shielded room. He was connected to an EEG apparatus to allow measurement of his brain waves at the time that he was attempting to perceive a hidden picture. The two target pictures were a tree and an envelope. He experienced difficulty, did not make a drawing that corresponded to either drawing, and passed. Alsol he found it very difficult to hold idecliiately still to make good EEG records. The same skeptical experimenter who drew the rabbit was the EEG operator on this second unsuccessful day. 30 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 :.CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 ta) TARGET W RESPONSE FIGURE 14 TARGET 4 (SOLAR SYSTEM) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 31 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG1AI,, Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 We(inesday,_ 8_AugUst--Three targets were drawn during the course of this day's work. In the first. the experimenters closed the outer door of the laboratory in which the shielded room is located (in addi- tion to the inner double doors) and worked in an adjoining room. The target picture in this case was a camel. Geller felt unsure and passed, but his first choice drawing was a horse (see Figure 15). The experimenters then returned to the room outside the shielded room and drew the second picture, which was the Golden Gate Bridge [Figure 16(a)]. Geller inside the shielded room drew some curved lines with some squares underneath [Figure 16(b)]. He said that he didn't know what the picture was and passed. The third picture was a flying seagull. Geller said almost Imme- diately that he saw a flying swan over a hill. He drew several birds and said that he was sure that his drawing was correct, which it was (Figure 17). Experiments were conducted in the shielded room for six days; good results were obtained on four of the days when there was no openly skeptical observer present. Thursday, 9 August--The experiments were moved to SHI's Engineering Building in order to make use of the computer facilities available. After Geller was secured in a shielded room about 150 feet down the hall and around a corner from the computer room and placed under continuous monoLtoring, a picture of a kite was drawn on the face of the TV screen driven by the computer's graphics program. Shortly after Geller was notified that the picture hbtd been'drawn, he had the computer room called to determine if the target picture was a geometric picture or an object. By talking to an intermediary, who was ignorant of the target picture, we told him that it was an object. Geller's first drawing in this case was a square with the diagonals drawn in. He then also drew some trian- gular airplanes and passed. His first drawing was a good representation of the actual target picture (Figure 18). Friday, 10 August--Two pictures were drawn and stored in the com- puter memory so that no visible evidence was available in the computer room after the picture was drawn. The first picture was a church, The picture was drawn and stored in the memory of the computer. Geller's responses are shown in the attached collection of drawings (Figure 19). It appears that both of 32 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET 2 W RESPONSE FIGURE 15 TARGET 5 (CAMEL) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 33 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET I"A ib) RESPONSE FIGURE 16 TARGET 6 (GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 34 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Q E (a) TARGET (b) RESPONSE FIGURE 17 TARGET 7 (SEAGULL FLYING) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 '7 OR Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET @N, ja (b) RESPONSE FIGURE 18 TARGET 8 (KITE ON CRT DISPLAY) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 36 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET (b) RESPONSE I W RESPONSE 2 FIGURE 19 TARGET 9 (CHURCH, STORED IN MEMORY OF TEXT-EDITING COMPUTER) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES 37 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 his attempts have some elements in coiimion with the target drawing, but lie had no idea that it was a church and he passed. The second target picture was stored on the face of the TV tube with the intensity turned off so that no picture was visible with the room lights turned on. Geller immediately drew an arrow under a rounded brick and then drew another arrow inside a suitcase. We consider the arrow in the suitcase similar to the target, which was an arrow through a heart (Figure 20). These latter two experiments admit to at least two hypotheses, which will require further work to differentiate: ~ Perception of information stored in the computer. ~ Perception of mental contents, since there were several people in the computer room, all of whom knew the nature of the target that was stored. A long-distance telepathy experiment was also done on 10 August. An East Coast scientist was called and asked to draw a simple represen- tational object for Geller to copy. [Following the experiment he indi- cated that lie drew two peaked mountains with a sun in the upper right.] Geller drew two arches side by 'side with a circle in the tipper right. Geller's picture also had a train-like object running through it. We consider this to be suggestive of communication but not conclusive. Further work along these lines is indieated. 38 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (b) RESPONSE I FIGURE 20 TARGET 10 (ARROW THROUGH HEART, STORED IN COMPUTER GRAPHICS PROGRAM) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES Approved For Release 2002110121 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET (c) RESPONSE 2 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 III PROPOSED PROGRAM A. Objective The objective of the proposed program is to investigate and develop techniques to enhance human perception of remote stimuli. Independent measures, such as EEG correlates, will be used wherever appropriate as an aid in performance evaluation and enhancement. B. Technical Approach Our past year's research has yielded considerable evidence that certain individuals have developed the ability to perceive accurately distant objects and scenes. In addition, it appears that ordinary subjects (not specially selected) can also perceive remote stimuli at a level of awareness sufficient to at least provide direct physiological output as to the nature of the stimulus. Therefore, SRI proposes to center a research program around gifted subjects who have successfully participated in our research to date, but also including unselected subjects. With these we shall endeavor to defira possible limitations with regard to remote viewing. We shall be particularly attentive to the physical, physiological, and psycholog- ical pa@rameters governing the phenomenon. We will use a variety of physiological measurements to help both subject and experimenter to measure the accuracy and reliability of the subjects' descriptions. The overall goal of such a program is to make possible the separation of signal (veridical material corresponding to a given remote location) from noise (false internal information) so as to result in an ability that can be usefully app@lied. A detailed description of the "method of approach" to be used in this research has been described in Section II of this proposal. The investigation that we propose here is an extension of the work just described, which we have been pursuing for the past year. We plan to continue to employ those methods and techniques that have yielded the greatest success in this recently completed research. 40 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 C. Statement of Work (1) By working with gifted subjects and SRI-generated target materials, SRI will measure the accuracy of remote view- ing as a function of such variables as length of viewing time, target distance, and target complexity. Based on the data accumulated, SRI will attempt to define the characteristics of the information channel in terms of bit rate, resolution, and other parameters of interest. In order to determine the limits of the remote viewing ability, both pictorial and geographic target material will be used. (2) In order to discriminate against the possibility of an unknown experimenter/subject leakage channel, for some experiments the client will provide geographical targets unknown to the experimenters to ensure that the subject uses only a remote viewing channel in his determination of the nature of the target. (3) Following a lead provided by work at'another laboratory in which a subject could identify pictorial material even if the picture was only "mentally projected" onto a card in a sealed envelope, SRI will study the use of pictorial target material with a decreasing density scale from clearly visible to invisible in order to measure the accuracy of perception as a function of target density. (4) The'EEG portion of the program will be directed toward the determination of physiological correlates of accurate remote viewing. Based on previous work, SRI will inves- tigate in detail the possibility.that the frequency shift in the alpha peak can be used as a measure to gauge the reliability of perception of a remote stimulus. This and other measures that may become available during the course of study will be made available as feedback to the subject to determine whether such information can be used to en- hance discrimination between correct viewing of a remote scene and false information. (5) SRI will continue and expand our study with subjects whose EEG patterns show direct frequency correlations with the flicker frequency of a remote stimulus. We will determine whether such a (generally unconscious) perception channel has sufficient reliability to serve as a possible communi- cation channel. If continuing positive results accrue, we will determine the effects of shielding and distance on the efficiency of this channel. 41 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (6) The effects of the introduction of persons at the remotely viewed target locations will be investigated to-determine possible enhancement or degradation of signal-to-noise ratio. (7) In view of the exploratory nature of the program, 15 percent of the effort will be set aside to explore, with the client's cognizance, avenues of research other than those listed and that may surface during the course of the program. SRI proposes to provide approximately 28 man-months of professional effort with appropriate support toward accomplishment of the foregoing. D. Reporting Schedule Brief monthly progress letters will be delivered the tenth day of each contract month, following the previous month's activity. A final technical report will be delivered 13 months after the commencement date of the contract. Throughout this program the Investigators plan to remain in close telephonic communication with the client. 42 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 TV QUALIFICATTONS OF STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE Stanford Research Institute is an independent, nonprofit organiza- tion perfonaing a broad spectrum of research under contract to business,, industry, and government. The Institute, which was formerly affiliated with Stanford University, was founded in 1946. Its operations include the physical and life sciences, industrial and development economicsp management systems, engineering systems, electronic,; and radio sciences,7 information science, urban and social systems, and various combinations of disciplines within these fields. Stanford Research Institute has no endowment, payments by clients under research contracts and grant-, amount to api)roximately $70 million annually and are used to cover all operating costs.. Such revenue also helps the Institute maintain the excellence of It-, research capabilities. SRI's facilities include more than one million square feet of office and laboratory space and incorporate the most advanced scientific equip- ment, including unique instrumentation developed by the staff. The bulk of these facilities and most of the research staff are located at the Institute's headquarters in Menlo Park, California. Regional office locations include Washington, D.C.; New York City; Chicago; Houston; and Los Angeles. Of SRI's total staff of 2600, approximately one-half are in profes- sional and technical categories. Some 400 members of the professional staff have Ph.D. or equivalent degrees; 600 others have their Master's degree. A The project leader and other research personnel who would be active in the proposed work are members of the Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory. This group currently occupies 40,-000 square feet of labora- tory space, divided into many separate laboratory rooms technicians' work areas, a machine shop and a computer room housing a LINC-8 and related terminals and equipment. In addition, a well-equipped computa- tion center is available. The Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory employs a number of technicians and engineering assistants and has available electronics material and test equipment useful in the development and testing of 43 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 the teaching machines. Especially suited to the work,described in the proposal are a number of shielded rooms wLth various instrumentation available. Finally, a backup team of psychologists and statisticians can be brought into the project on an internal counsulting basis. The proposed research will be conducted by SRI staff members within the Electronics and Bioonginecring Laboratory under the management of its director, Mr. Earle Jones. The principal investigator will be Dr. Harold Puthoff. Mr. Russell Targ, of the Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory and Dr. Charles Rebert, a neuro-physiologist in SRI's Life Sciences Division will be co-investigators. Professor Gerold Feinberg of Columbia University and Professor Charles Tart of the University of California may be called upon to act as consultants throughout this program. In addition to the scientific personnel directly engaged in the research aspects of this investigation, Stanford Research Institute has established an internal technical advisory board. This board con- sists of several directors of SRI's operating divisions,, together with our legal counsel, all under the chairmanship of the senior vice president for research. It is the function of this advisory board not only to make recommendations and approve or disapprove every new direction taken by the Institute in this research area but to monitor related ongoing projects as well. 44 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 EARLE D. JONES, DIRECTOR ELECTRONICS AND BIOENGINEERING LABORATORY INFORMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DIVISION SpeciaLized professional competence Analysis and design of electronic-optical systems; design of television systems; facsimile systems, including bandwidth compression; electro- static printing SRI ( 1956) i i nce s gnments at Representative research ass . Character generator for high-speed electrostatic printer r r J_T . Delay line scanning techniques . High-density photographic recording of television information . Bandwidth reduction study for satellite cloud photographs . Design of bandwidth reduction system for facsimile . Development of communication line equalization system using automatic transversal filters . Color facsimile systems with electrostatic printing . Design of a new frequency synthesizer Other professional experience . Student engineer, Boeing Company; microwave airborne radar . Designer, Square D. Company; electrical equipment design Academic background B.S. in electrical engineering (1956), Georgia Institute of Technology; M.S. in electrical engineering (1958), Stanford University Publications and patents ~ "A Versatile Character Generator with Digital Input," 1959 IRE WESCON Conv. Rec. ~ "Character Generator for Digital Computers," Electronics (February 1960) ~ Six patents in electronic circuitry, character generators, frequency synthesizers, and electrostatic printing systems Aa Professional associations and honors . Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers . Optical Society of America . Society for Motion Picture and Television Engineers . Eta Kappa Nu . Phi Kappa Phi . Tau Beta Pi . Phi Eta Sigma 45 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 ;!Aj@OT D E. PUTHOFF, SENIOR RESEA.RCH ENGINEER T-TRO@ ICS A"') ]3T 3F,-CTNEERTNIIC@ INFORMATION SC-[EiTC--- AND ENGINEERING DIVISION '1@)e-laZized ProfessionaZ competence Tunable laser research and development; quantum electronics; electron beam devices; biofeedback and biomeasurement research e,@)resentative research assignments Development of tunable uitraviolet laser source for pollution studies and medical research Developmeiit of high-power tunable infrared laser source (50-250 microns) for materials research Assessmen+L of potential of fiber optics and lasers for use in optical computers Development of hiofeedback monitors (GSR) for use in educational com- puters and other man-machine links Research and development in biofield measurements @'Jther Professiunal experience Research associate, Hansen Laboratories of Physics and lecturer, DeDartment of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University (1967-71); teaching, textbook author, and research supervisor of Ph.D. candidates the area of lasers and nonlinear optics Consultan-_ on application of lasers to industrial and medical problems and research assistant, Stanford University (1963-67) T 1,t., US14R (1960-63); in-house research and contract monitoring on DoD (NSA) con7racts concerned with the development of ultra high-speed (GHz) computers Research engineer, Sperry Electronic Tube Division and Sperry Fellow, University of Florida (1958-60); design and testing of electron beam focusing systems for use in microwave tubes emic background E.E.E. (1958) and M.S.E. (1960), University of Florida; Ph.D. in electrical engineering (1967), Stanford University 7@@ZZications and patents Coauthor of textbook, FundamentaZs of Quantum EZectronics, Wiley; 2 reference book contributions; 23 papers in professional journals; 14 national symposium papers; numerous technical reports 2 patents J1rC4`essionaZ associations and honors Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers; Sigma Tau; Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Xi 46 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 PLBLICATIONS OF HAROLD E. PUTHOFF W. W. Ileterson an(] If. E. Puthoff, "A Theoretical Study of Ion Plasma Oscilla- tions," IRE Elect. Devices, Vol. ED-6, p. 372 (1959). H. E. Puthoff, Crossed-Field Focusing of a Hollow Cylindrical Electron Beam M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida (January 1960). A. D. Sutherland et al., "On the Use of Periodic Electrostatic Focusing in Klystrons," presented at Int. Congress on Microwave Tubes., Munich, West Germany (June 1960). Also presented at 18th Conf. on Electron Tube Research, Seattle, Washington (June 1960). If. E. Puthoff, "Design of a Crossed-Field Electron Gun," presented at 18th Conf. on Electron Tube Research, Seattle, Washington (June 1960), 11 H. E. Puthoff, "Scaling Matrix for the Analog Computer, NSA Tech. Jour., Vol. 7 (1962). J. T. Tippett and H. E. Puthoff, "The Status of Optical Logic Elements for Nanosecond Computer Systems," Proc. Pacific Computer Conf., Pasadena,, Cali- fornia (March 1963). Also published in NSA Tech. Jour., Vol. 8 (1963). It If. E. Puthoff, R. H. Pantell, and B. G. Huth, Tunability of the Raman Laser J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 37, p. 860 (1966). R. It. Pantell et al., "Mode Coupling in an External Raman Resonator Appl. Phys.. Letters, Vol. 9, p. 104 (1966). 11 B. G. Huth et al., Characteristics of the Stimulated Raman Effect in an external Resonator," Proc. Sixth Int. Conf. on Microwave and Optical Generation and Amplification', Cambridge Eng land (September 1966). _1 "Q Quantitative Study of the Stimulated Raman Effect Using an Off- Axis Resonator," IEEE J. Quant. Elect., Vol, QE-2, p. 763 (1966). R. Pantell et al., "Theoretical and Experimental Values for Two, Three, and Four 1. Photon Absorptions, J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 46, p. 3507 (1967). H. E. Puthoff et al. , 11 Near-Forward Raman Scattering in LiNbO 31" J. Appl. P@Zs., Vol. 39, p. 2144 (1968). H. E. Puthoff, "The Stimulated Raman Effect and Its Application as a Tunable Laser, 1. Ph.D. Thesis, Stanford University, Stanford, California (June 1967). R. H. Pantell, G. Soncini, and H. E. Puthoff, "Stimulated Photon-Electron Scattering,," IEEE J. Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-4, p. 903 (1968). 11 J. Gelbwachs et al., A Tunable Stimulated Raman Oscillator," Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 14, p. 258 (1969). 47 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 J. M. Yarborough et al. Efficient Tunable Optical Emission from NiNbO3 without to a Resonator , Appl. Phys.Letters, Vol. 15, p. 102 (1969). It 11 S. S. Sussman et al. , A New Source of Tunable Optical and Infrared Radiation , Proc'. Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn International Sympos um of Submillimeter !Ef±1 New York, New York (March 1960). It B. C. Johnson et al. , Power and Linewidth of Tunable Stimulated Far IR Emission in LiNbO3," Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 18, p. 181 (1970). E. Amzallag et al., "Stimulated Raman and Polariton Scattering in Li,03," J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 43, p. 3251 (1971). D. L. Hecht et al., "Dye Lasers With Ultrafast Transverse Flow," IEEE J. Quant. ElEct., Vol. QE-8, p. 15 (1972). H. Puthoff and R. H. Pantell, Fundamentals of Quantum Electronics (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, New York, 1969). Published in Russian by Mir Publishing House, Moscow, 1972. 48 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 :'-'YLLIS M. COLE, RESEARCH ANALYST rNFORMATION SCIENCE LABORATORY L'IFORMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DIVISION SpeciaZized professionaZ competence Author of mathematics textbooks; curri.cula developer and author of computer-assisted instruction courses Representative research assignments at SRI ~ Survey and analysis of instructional technology for ARPA ~ Development of curricula for Educational Laboratory at SRI ~ Organized a continuing regional seminar on computer-assisted instruction Other professionaZ experience ~Mathematics teacher for secondary school students, elementary school students, and teachers ~Participated in development of elementary school mathematics text- book series Sets and Numbers ~Writer-in-chief for computer-assisted instruction project to teach mathematics at Brentwood (elementary) School ~Project leader, curriculum author of project to teach computer pro- gramming to ghetto high school students via computer-assisted instruction ~Research associate, Institute for Mathematical Studies in the Social Science, Stanford University (1963-71) Acadet,:@c background B.A. in mathematics (1962), Middlebury College; M.A.T. in secondary mathematics education (1963), Harvard University PubZications Coauthor, junior-high school textbook series Sets, Numbers, and Systems; "CAI for, Elementary Computer Programming: SIMPER, LOGO, and BASIC," Technical Report, Stanford University; coauthor of several SRI reports 49 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 REEE1*)r, PROJECT SUPERVISOR -Y- T@Ij7 -,@Y R' 7, ? A: 1 S- I E "ITS I ON C E S D -'!ia'ized t@ pro:-3ssionaL corme-t@ence !.'nysiological psvchoiogy, esneciaily the relationships between electro- Ohysioloc, ,v and behavior; ootentials, single and multiple units, ,L1.11Ma-L behavior, etectrical- and chemical brain stimulation; experi- iuental desi@,I-n and statistics research assionients at SRI (since 1968) ~ 1)@,veionment of human EEG laboratory ~ DeveloDment of mosquito o-L-Faction laboratory ~ Studies on -DC potentials in humans, monkey3, and cats dF@press--ion in the brain 01-factorv-trigeminal interactions DC and mult--nle unit resnonses f-I'lectrophys--ology of paranormal perception 011@her professional" experience @'esearch assistant, Division of EEG and Neuronhysiology, Department Psychiatry, The Universitv of Iowa instruct-or. Universitv of California Extension; courses included J.ntroductorv Psychology; The Electrical Activity of the Brain; Man ,tnd His Brain: A Survey ,,,,d(3mic background A.B. (1961) and M.A. (1964) in psychology, San Diego State College; @.Ih.D. in Physiological psychology (1968), the University of Iowa 1 1 Z Ecations D . Author of 22 scientific publications '--f3asional associations ~ American EEG Society ~ Neuroscience Society Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21.: CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 PUBLICATIONS OF CHARLES REBERT D. A. Irwin, J. R. Knott, D. W. McAdam, and C. S. Rebert, "Motivational Determinants of the 'Contingent Negative Variation," Electroonceph. Clin. Nourophyqiol., Vol. 21, pp.538-543 (1966). D. W. McAdam, D. A. Irwin, C. S. Robert, and J. R. Knott, "Conative Control of the Con- tingent Negative Variation," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol, Vol. 21@ pp. 154-155 (1966). C. S. Rebert, D. W. McAdam, J. R. Knott -, and D. A. Irwin, "Slow Potential Change in Human Brain Related to Level of Motivation," J. Comp. Physiol. Psychol., Vol. 63, pp. 20-23 (1967). D. W. McAdam, J. R. Knott, and C. S. Rebert, "Cortical Slow Potential Changes in Man Related to Intorstimulus Interval and to Pre-Trial Prediction of Interstimulus Interval, Psychophysiology, Vol. 5y pp. 349-358 (1969). J. Kaplan and C. S. Rebort, "The Effect of Pressurized Air in Establishing Discriminative Response Suppression in Stump-Tailed Macaques," Behavior Research Methods and Instrumenta- tion, Vol. 6, pp. 262-263 (1959). C. S. Rebert, "D. C. and Multiple Unit Recording in Lateral Geniculate Body of the Cat," Proc. American Psychological Association Convention, Vol. 77, pp. 215-216 (1969). C. S. Robert and D. A. Irwin, "Slow Potential Changes in Cat Brain During Appetitive and Aversive Classical Conditioning of Jaw Movement," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 27, pp. 152-161 (1969). D. A. Irwin and C. S. Robert, "Slow Potential Changes in Cat Brain During Classical Appetitive Condi tigning of Jaw Movement Using Two Levels of Reward," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 28 pp. 119-126 (1970). C. S. Rebert, "Spreading Depression in Squirrel Monkey Lissencephalic Cortex," Physiol. and Behav., Vol. 51 pp. 239-241 (1970). C. S. Robert, and J. R. Knotty "The Vertex Non-Specific Evoked Potential and Latency of Contingent Negative Variation,",Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol.y Vol. 28, pp. 561-565 (1970). 11. Stone and C. S. Rebert, "Observations on Olfactory and Trigeminal Interactions," Brain Research, Vol. 21@ pp. 138-142 (1970). C. S. Robert, "The Effect of Reaction Time Feedback on Reaction Time and Contingent Negative Variation," Psychophysiology, Vol. 9, pp. 334-339 (1972). C. S. Robert, "Cortical and Subcortical Slow Potentials in the Monkey's Brain During a Preparatory Interval," Electroonceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 33, pp. 389-402 (1972). E. D. Davis and C. S. Robert, "Elements of Olfactory Receptor Coding in the Yellow Fever Mosquito," J. Econ. Entomol., Vol. 65 pp. 1058-1061 (1972). G. T. Steinmetz and C. S. Robert, "Post-Reinforcement Changes of Steady Potentials In Premotor Cortex of Monkeys," Physiol. Behav., Vol. 91 pp. 769-772 (1973). 51 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 C. S. Robert and K. G. Sperry, "Subjective and Response-Related Determinants of CNV Amplitude," PsychophysiologY, Vol. 10, pp. 139-144 (1973). C. S. Rebert, "A Technique for Simultaneous Measurement of DC and Multiple Unit Responses, Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 34, pp. 324-326 (1973). C. S. Robert and D. A. Irwin, "Simple Electrode Configuration for Chronic or Acute Record- Ing of DC Potentials from Subcortical Nuclei of the Brain@" Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 34, pp. 440-442 (1973). C. S. Rebert, "Some Elements of a General Cerebral System Related to CNV Genesis," in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.), Event Related Slow Potentials of the-Brain: Their Relation to Behavior, Amsterdam: Elsevier (1973, in press). C. S. Robert and J. J. Tecce, "A Summary of CNV and Reaction Time, in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.), Event Related Slow Potentials of the Brain: Their Relation to Behavior, Amsterdam: Elsevier (1973, in press). C. S. Rebert, "Further Analysis of CNV and Reaction Time," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Abstract.(19730 in press). C. S. Rebert, "Slow Potential Correlates of Neuronal Population Responses in the Cat's Lateral Geniculate Nucleus," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 35, pp. 511-515 (1973). C. S. Rebert, "Slow Potential Changes in the Monkey's Brain During Reaction Time Foreperiod," in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.) Third Congress on Event Related Slow Potentials (1974, in press). C. S. Rebert, G. T. Pryor, and J. Schaeffor, "Slow Cortical Potential Consequence of Electroconvulsive Shock in Rats," Physiol. Behav. (1974, in press). C. S. Rebert, R. Berry, and J. Merlo, "DC Potential Consequences of Induced Muscle Tension: Effects on Contingent Negative Variation," in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.) LLird Congress on Event Related Slow Potentials (1974, in press). 52 1Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 RUSSELL TARG, SENIOR RESEARCH PHYSICIST ELECTRONICS AND BIOENGINEERING LABORATORY INFORMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DIVISION Specialized professionaL competence Development of new gas lasers; FM laser and supermode laser techniques; laser noise reduction; optical modulation and demodulation; experi- ments in new gaseous laser media; microwave diagnostic techniques; microwave generation from plasmas Professional experience ~ Sylvania Corporation (1962-72); investigation of techniques for development of new gas lasers, making use of his research with com- pact, self-contained multi-kilowatt.C02 lasers ~ Technical Research Group (1959-62); experiments in new gaseous laser media ~ Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn; assisted in the establishment of the Electron Beam Laboratory ~ Sperry Gyroscope Company, Electron Tube Division (1956-59); experi- mental work in microwave generation from plasmas; early work in the technology of ultrahigh-vacuum and ion-pump design Academic background B.S. in physics (1954), Queens College, New York; graduate work in physics (1954-56), Columbia University, New York Publications and inventions ~ Author of "Optical Heterodyne Detection of Microwave-Modulated Light," Proc. IEEE (1964); coauthor of numerous articles on lasers and plasma oscillations ~ Invention of the tunable plasma oscillator at microwave frequencies Professional associations and honors ~ IEEE; American Physical Society; The Optical Society of America ~ Awarded the position of research associate with the Polytechnic Insti- tute of Brooklyn 53 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002110/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001'-3 PUBLICATIONS OF RUSSELL TARG R. Targ and L. P. Levine, "Backward-Wave Oscillations in a System Composed of an Electron Beam and a Hydrogen Gas Plasma," J. of Appl. Phys., Vol. 32, No. 4, pp. 731-737 (April 1961). M. Ettenborg and R. Targ, "Observations of Plasma and Cyclotron Oscillations , Proc. of the Symposium on Electronic Waveguides, Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, Now York (April 8-10, 1958). P. Rabinowitz, S. Jacobs, R. Targ, and G. Gould , Honodyne Detection of Phase Modulated Light," Proc. IRE, Vol. 50, No. 11 (November 1962). G. Grosof and R. Targ, "Enhancement in Mercury-Krypton and Xenon-Krypton Gaseous Discharges," Appl. Opticsil Vol. 21 No. 31 pp. 299-302 (March 1963). R. Targ, "Optical Heterodyne Detection of Microwave-Modulated Light Proc. IEEE (Correspondence), pp. 303-304 (March 1964). R. Targ, D. E. Caddes, and B. J. McMurtry, "The Traveling-Wave Phototube. Part II: Experimental Analysis "I IEEE Trans. on Electron Devices, Vol. ED-111 pp. 164-170 (April 1964). S. E. Harris and R. Targ, "FM Oscillation of the He-Ne Laser , App. Phys. Letters, Vol. 5, No. 10, pp. 202-204 (15 November 1964). R. Targ, G. A. Massey, and S. E. Harris, "Laser Frequency Translation by Means of Electro-Optic Coupling Control," Proc. IEEE (correspondence), Vol. 52, No. 10, pp. 1247-1248 (October 1964). R. Targ and W. D. Bush, "Automatic Frequency Control of a Laser Local Oscillator for the Heterodyne Detection of Microwave-Modulated Light," Appl. Optics, Vol. ,1..No. 11, pp. 523-1527 (December 1965). G. A. Massey, M. K. Oshman, and R. Targ, "Generation of Single-Frequency Light Using the FM Laser," Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 61 No. 1. pp. 10-11 (January 1965). L. N1. Osterink and R. Targ, "Single-Frequency Light from an Argon FM Laser , Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol, 10, No. 4, pp. 115-117 (February 1967). R. Targ and J. M. French, Stabilization of a He-Ne Laser , Proc. IEEE, Vol. 55) No. 7, pp, 1185-1192 (July 1967). L. M. Osterink and R. Targ, "Single-Frequency Light Using the Super-Mode Tech- nique with an Argon FM Laser," Proc. of the Symposium on Modern Optics, Poly- technic Institute of Brooklyn, New York (March 22-24, 1967). R. Targ and L. M. Osterink, "Frequency Stabilization and Quieting of the FM Laser," 1967 WESCON Convention Record, San Francisco, California. R. Targ and J. M. Yarborough, "Mode-Locked Quieting of the He-Ne and Argon Lasers," Appl. Phys. LEtters, Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 3-4 (1 January 1968). 54 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 D. E. Caddes, L. M. Osterink, and R. Targ, "Mode-Locking of the C02 Laser Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 74-76 (1 February 1968). R. Targ, J. M. Yarborough, and J. M. French, "Frequency Stabilization and Noise Suppression in the Argon FM Laser "I IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-4) pp. 644-648 (October 1968). ti W. B. Tiffany, R. Targ, and J. D. Foster, "Kilowatt CO2 Gas-Transport Laser Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 15, No. 3 (1969). W. B. Tiffany, and R. Targ, "The Gas-Transport Laser--A New Class of High-Power Electro-Optic Devices," Laser Focus, pp. 48-50 (September 1969). R. Targ and W. B. Tiffany, "Gain and Saturation in Transverse Flowing CO _N He ft 2 2- Mixtures, Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 15, No. 9 (1 November 1969). S. E. Schwarz, T. A. deTemple, and R. Targ, "High Pressure Pulsed Xenon Laser , Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 17, No. 7 (1 October 1970). J. D. Taynai, R. Targ, and W. B. Tiffany, "An Investigation of Tellurium for Frequency Doubling with C02 Lasers," IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-7 (8 August 1971). 11. Targ and M. W. Sasnett, "High Repetition Rate Xenon Laser with Transverse 11 Excitation, IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-8, pp. 166-169 (February 1972). R. Targ and M. W. Sasnett , 11 Xenon-Helium Laser at High Pressure and High Repeti- it tion Rate, Appl.. Phys. Letters, Vol. 19, No. 12 (15 December 1971). ti R. Targ, "Pulsed Nitrogen Laser at High Repetition Rate, IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-8, pp. 726-728 (August 1972). t T R. Targ and D. Hurt, Learning Clairvoyance and Precognition with an Extrasensory Perception Teaching Machine," Parapsychology Review, pp. 9-11 (July 1972). Approved .For Release 2002?PO/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 W. E] U N CLASS IF I toprovefnDrfty%@ 2002/10/21 SUBJECT: (optional) CIA-RDn-CWNPfflN1@AQ8OOO1-3 SECRE7 ROUTING AND RECORD SHEET FROM: LSR/ORD/DD/S&T Room 716 Ames EXTENSION NO. DATE 23 November 1973 TO: (Officer designation, room number, and building) DA RECEIVED TE FORWARDED IRDED OFFICER'S OFFICER'S I IN ITIALS INITIALS F COMMENTS (Number each comment ia show from w to whom. Draw a line across column Ater each comm PMS/ORD 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 12. 13. IA. 15. Approved For Rel ease 200 2/10/211 : CIA-R[3@ i,m it 79-00999AOOO300080001-3 FORM USE PREVIO INTERNAL 3-62 610 EDMONSus [:1 SECRET CONFIDENTIAL USE ONLY UNCLASSIFIED GlA SG113 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Next 7 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 pproved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 7 F 1 1 1 October 1973 Proposal for Research SRI No. ISH 73-146 PERCEPTUAL AUGMENTATION TECHNIQUES Part One--Technical Proposal ORM 1-lVd-Z3 Prepared by: Harold E. Puthoff Senior Research Engineer Russell Targ Senior Research Physicist Approved: Earle D. Jones, Diret-tit!(r Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory Bonnar Cox, Executive Director Information Science and Engineering Division Copy No. Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 In Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 CONTENTS LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LIST OF TABLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iv I INT RODUCT ION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 Il BACKGROUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 A. Exploratory Research in Remote Viewing . . . . . . . . 3 1. Global 'I'argets--Training Mode . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. Demonstration-of-Ability Tests: Double-Blind Client-Supplied Coordinates . . . . . . . . . . . 6 B. EEG Experiments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 C. Remote Perception of Graphic Material . . . . . . . . . 23 III PROPOSED PROGRAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 A. Objective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 B. Technical Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 C. Statement of Work . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 D. Reporting Schedule . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 IV QUALIFICATIONS OF STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE . . . . . . . 43 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-0099.9AO00300080001-3 ILLUSTRATIONS I Training Results (Swann) .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2 Map No. 1 of West Virginia Site (Swann) . . . . . . . . . . 8 3 Map No. 2 of West Virginia Site (Detail--Swann) . . . . . . 9 4 Map of Ur als Site (Price) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5 Map No. 1 of Kerguelen Island Site (Detail--Swann). 14 6 Map No. 2 of Kerguelen Island Site (Swann) . . . . . . . . . 15 7 Map No. 3 of Kerguelen Island Site (Price) . . . . . . . . . 17 8 Occipital EEG Frequency Spectra, 0 to 25 Hz, of Jean Mayo Y Receiver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 9 Occipital EEG Frequency Spectra, 0 to 25 Hz, of Hella Hammid, Receiver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . o. . . . 22 10 Shielded Room Used for EEG Measurements . . . . . . . . . . 24 11 Target 1 (Firecracker) and Geller's Responses . . . . . . . 25 12 Target 2 (Grapes) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . . . . 27 13 Target 3 (Devil) and Geller's Responses .. . . . . . . . . . 28 14 Target 4 (Solar System) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . 31 15 Target 5 (Camel) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . . . . . 33 16 Target 6 (Golden Gate Bridge) and Geller's Response . . . . 34 17 Target 7 (Seagull Flying) and Geller's Response . . . . . . 35 18 Target 8 (Kite on CRT Display) and Geller's Response . . . . 36 19 Target 9 (Church, Stored in Memory of Text-Editing Computer) and Geller's Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 20 Target 10 (Arrow Through Heart, Stored in Computer . Graphics Program) and Geller's Responses . . . . . . . . . . 39 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 TABLE 1 Results of Global Targets.Training--Run 10 . . . . . . . . . 5 0 0 iv Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I INTRODUCTION Stanford Research Institute proposes to undertake a one-year research program to investigate,, and develop techniques to enhance@ human percep- tual abilities. The perceptual abilities that we have been investigating for the past year are sometimes considered paranormal phenomena. However, our recent work leads us to consider them as, to a greater or lesser extent, latent in all people. The phenomena we have investigated most exten- sively pertain to the ability of certain individuals to view with great clarity distant scenes not presented to any known perceptual sense. In additionY we have performed more modest experiments with unselected sub- jects who have been found to exhibit direct physiological (EEG) evidence of perception of remote happenings. Our accumulated data make it appear that both gifted and ordinary persons can be assisted in developing remote perceptual abilities up to a level dictated by their individual potentialities. The purpose of the proposed research is to investigate the physical and psychological variables underlying these phenomena so that we may gain a greater understanding of this ability and a more com- plete grasp of its limits and applicability. Section II of this proposal provides background material, detailing the evidence pertaining to remote viewing and other nonregular percep- tual abilities. In this section we describe: ~ Experiments with two gifted individuals who -took part in double-blind experiments to perceive scenes at intercon- tinental distances. ~ Brain wave experiments in which ordinary (not specially selected) subjects were asked to perceive whether or not a remote light was flashing--the EEG data from several of these subjects indicates objectively that they did perceive the presence of the light, even if only at a noncognitive level of their consciousness. This proposal has been prepared at the request of the client. I Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Il BACKGROUND A. Exploratory Research in Remote Viewing As a result of experimentation carried out in an eight-month program to investigate the abilities of a gifted subject, Ingo Swann, Swann ex- pressed the opinion that the insights obtained had strengthened ail ability that has been researched before he joined the SRI program; namely, the ability to view remote locations. To test Swann's assertion., SRI re- searchers set up a series of experimental protocols on a gradient scale of increasing difficulty. The first step toward the proof that such an ability might exist in principle was completed in our laboratory in a series of experiments with another subject in which target pictures were successfully received where the subject was separated from the target material either by an electrically isolated shielded room or by the isolation provided by East-coast/West-coast distances. These data are presented in Part C of this section. 1. Global Targets--Training Mode For the first experiment., considered to be a training mode, 100 targets on the earth's surface (ten per day for ten days) were chosen at random,, often by different experimenters. For each ten-trial session,, the experiment would begin with the subject (Swann) being given a target location by latitude and longitude only, for which he had to provide an immediate response of what he saw. Following his response, some brief indication was given as to whether any correspondence existed between his description and the target location. The next coordinate was then given until all ten coordinates were exhausted. A run of ten coordinates was always completed in less than 30 minutes. The results obtained during the training mode are summarized in Figure 1, where a least-squares fit to the data is shown by the solid lines. Details for the final run (Run 10) are shown in Table 1. The second coordinate in Run 10 (Table 1) affords a surprising example of precision that sometimes occurred. The experimenter chose 3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 10 8 I-IITS/RUN 6 out of 10 trials/run 4 2 8 LESSER 6 CORRESPONDENCES/ RUN out of 4 10 trials/run 2 0 0 0 0 6 MISSES/RLIN 4 out of 10 trials/run 2 0 L I 0 2 4 6 8 10 RUN NUMBER SA-2613-1 FIGURE 1 TRAINING RESULTS (SWANN) 4 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Table I RESULTS OF GLOBAL TARGETS TRAINING--RUN 10 Target 45'N 150"W (ocean) 210S 340E (eastern shore, Lake Victoria, Africa) 550N 150"E (Sea of Okhotsk) 64'N 19'W (20 miles ENE of Mt. Hekla volcano, Iceland) 550N 130"E (Soviet Union) 60'N 90OW (Hudson Bay) 60'N 91OF: (Soviet Union) 300S 0' (ocean) 42'N 105" (Gobi) 13VE Response Evaluation- Oceany beautiful blue-green waves, sun H shining,, ship toward north Sen@;e of speeding over water, landing H on land. Lake to west, high elevation Not many trees, patches of snow, marsh? Volcano to southwest. I think I'm over ocean. Wind blowing there, night, telephone wires. Land, flat place with fields; Cold. Open water, stands of pine to north. Citv, snow on ground, city to north- east, factory to south. Oce@in, Atlantic, deep blue water. Mountains S Islands, Land mass to east, west. ke Eyre, Australia) An open sea, night. H--Hit; good description of area in near vicinity of target. N--Neutral; some possibilitv of correspondence. M--Miss; clear lack of correspondence. M H N H N H H H 5 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 the coordinate from a world map to represent the middle of Lake Victorial Africa. However, Swann insisted that the coordinate, when given'. turned on a picture of land to the right of a large lake. Subsequent checking with a detailed map of the region indicated that his perception had been correct. We must, of course, point out that the results of such a train- ing mode can be taken as indicative only, since even under the carefully controlled experimental conditions in force,, 0 An individual could--in principle--obtain good results on the basis of eidetic memory. a Given the hypothesis of extraordinary functioning an individual could--in principle--obtain the data subliminally from an experimenter who knows the target location. Therefore, the rapid global targets training mode was followed up with a series of global targets supplied by Stanford Research Institute personnel on a double-blind basis in which detail was obtained on build- ings, roads, bridges, and the like. The results were sufficiently ac- r4a curate to lead us to propose the client-controlled demonstration-of- ability tests described in the following paragraphs. The final evaluation rests on the analysis of the double-blind targets used in the concluding demonstration-of-ability tests. 2. Demonstration-of-Ability Tests: Double-Blind Client-Supplied Coordinates In order to subject the remote viewing phenomena to a rigorous test under control of the client, a request for coordinates was trans- mitted to the client. In response, SRI personnel received the first set of coordinatesY hereafter referred to as the West Virginia Site. a. West Virginia Site (Swann) Date: 29 May 1973, 1634-1640, Menlo Park, California Protocol: Coordinates 38023' 45-48"Nil 79025' 00"W J given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject I. Swann to initiate experiment. No maps were permitted and the subject wAs asked to give an immediate response. The session was recorded on video tape. 6 Approved For Release-2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Swann response: This seems to be some sort of mounds or rolling hills. There is a city to the north (I can see the taller buildings and some smog). This seems to be a strange place, somewhat like the lawns that one would find around a military base, but I get the impression that there are either some old bunkers around, or maybe this is a covered reservoir. There must be a flagpole, some highways to the west, possibly a river over to the far east, to the south more city. The map of Figure 2 was drawn. On the following morning, Swann submitted a written re- port of a second reading, dated 30 May 1973, 0735-0758, Mountain View, California. Cliffs to the eastY fence to the north. There's a circular building (a tower?), buildings to the south. Is this a former Nike base or something like that? This is about as far as I could go without feedback, and perhaps guidance as to what was wanted. There is something strange about this area, but since I don't know particularly what to look for within the scope of the cloudy ability, it is extremely difficult to make decisions on what is there and what is not. Imagination seems to get in the way. (For example, I seem to get the impression of some- thing underground, but I'm not sure.) However, it is apparent that on first sighting 'the general location was correctly spotted.' The map of Figure 3 was drawn. b. West Virginia Site (Price) As a back-up test, the coordinates were given to a second subject (Price) who appears to possess similar ability in casual testing. The task was presented to the second subject independently of the first, both to prevent collaboration and to prevent any sense of competition. Date: 1 June 1973, 1700, Menlo Park, California Protocol: Coordinates 38023' 45-48"Nil 79025' 00"W given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject Price by telephone to initiate experiment. 7 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 T-M A Jww- w I @V@v FIGURE 2 MAP NO. I OF WEST VIRGINIA SITE (SWANN) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 8 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 65 FIGURE 3 MAP NO. 2 OF WEST VIRGINIA SITE (DETAIL-SWANN) 9 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 On the morning of 4 June 1973 Price's written response (dated 2 June 1 97319 1250-1350, Lake Tahoe, California) was received in the mail. Looked at general area from altitude of about 1500' above highest terrain. On my left forward quadrant is a peak in a chain of mountainsY elevation approximately 4996' above sea level. Slopes are greyish slate covered with variety of broad leaf trees'. vines, shrubbery, and undergrowth. I am facing about 30-50 west of north. Looking down the mountain to the right (east) side is a roadway, freeway country style--curves around base of mountain from S.W.--swings north for a few miles, then heads E.N.E. to a fairly large city about 30-40 miles dis- tant. This area was a battleground in civil war--low rolling hills, creeks, few lakes or reservoirs. There is a smaller town a little S.E. about 15-20 miles distant with small settle- ments, village type, very rural, scattered around. Looking across the peak, 2500-3000' mountains stretch out for a hundred or so miles. Area is essentially wooded. Some of the westerly slopes are eroded and gully washed--looks like strip mining, coal mainly. Weather at this time is cloudy, rainy. Temperature at my alti- tude about 540--high cumulo nimbus clouds to about 25,,000- 30,000'. Clear area., but turbulent, between that level and some cirro stratus at 46,1000'. Air mass in that strip moving W.N.W. to S.E. 1318 Perceived that peak area has large underground storage areas. Road comes up back side of mountains (west slopes), fairly well concealed, looks deliberately so. It's cut under trees where possible--would be very hard to detect flying over area. Looks like former missile site--bases for launchers still there, but area now houses record storage area, microfilm, file cabinets; as you go into underground area through aluminum rolled up doors', first areas filled with records, etc. Rooms about 100' long, 40' wide, 20' ceilings with concrete supporting pilastersy flare-shaped.. Temperature cool--fluorescent lighted. Personnel, Army 5th Corps Engineers. M/Sgt. Long on desk plac- ard on grey steel desk--file cabinets security locked--combina- tion locks'. steel rods through eye bolts. Beyond these rooms, heading east., are several bays with computers, communication equipment, large maps, display type, overlays. Personnel, Army Signal Corps. Elevators. 10 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 1330 - Looked over general area from original location again-- valleys quite hazy, lightning about 30 miles north along moun- tain ridge. Temperature drop about 60, it's about 480. Looking for other significances: see warm air mass moving in from S.W. colliding with cool air mass about 100 miles E.S.E. from my viewpoint. Air is very turbulent--tornado type; birds in my area seeking heavy cover. There is a fairly large river that I can see about 15-20 miles north and slightly west; runs N.E.; then curves in wide valley running S.W. to N.E.; river then runs S.E. Area to east, low rolling hills. Quite a few Civil War monuments. A marble.colonnade type: 11 In this area was fought the battle of Lynchburg where many brave men of the Union and Confederate Armys (sic) fell. We dedicate this area to all peace loving people of the future--Daughters G.A.R." On a later date Price was asked to return to the West Virginia site with the goal of obtaining codeword informationY if pos- sible. In responseJ, Price supplied the following information: Top of desk had papers labeled: Flytrap Minerva File cabinet on north wall labeled: Operation Pool --- Ond word unreadable) Folders inside cabinet la@eled: Cueball 14 Ball 4 Ball 8 Ball Rackup Name of site vaguely seems like Hayfork or Haystack. Personnel: Col. R. J. Hamilton Maj. Gen. George R. Nash Major John C. Calhoun?? C. Urals Site (Price) After obtaining a reading on the West Virginia site, Price volunteered that he scanned the other side of the globe for a Bloc equiv- alent, and found one in the Urals at 65000'57"N, 59059'59"E, described as follows. Elevation, 6200'. Scrubby brush, tundra type ground hummocks, rocky outcroppings, mountains with fairly steep slopes. Facing 11 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 north, about 60 miles ground slopes to marshland. Mountain chain runs off to right about 350 east of north. Facing south.1 mo'untains run fairly north and south. Facing west.@ mountains drop down to foothills for 60 miles or so; some rivers running roughly north. Facing east, mountains are rather abrupt.? dropping to rolling hills and to flat land. Area site under- ground, reinforced concrete, doorways of steel of the roll-up type. Unusually high ratio of women to menY at least at night. I see some helipads, concrete. Light rail tracks run from pads to another set of rails that parallel the doors into the mountain (see Figure 4). Thirty miles north (50 west of north) of the site is a radar installation with one large (165') dish and two small fast-track dishes. The above reports were submitted to the client for evalua- tion. A second set of coordinates was requested and obtained, P ereafter referred to as the Kerguelen Island Site. lipads MOUNTAIN FACE FIGURE 4 ' MAP OF URALS SITE (PRICE) 12 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 d. Kerguelen Island Site (Swann) Date: 21 July 1973, 1708-1730, Menlo Park, California Protocol: Coordinates 49020'S@ 70014'E given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject I. Swann to initiate experi- ment. No maps were permitted and the subject was asked to give an immediate response. The session was recorded on video tape. Swann response: My initial response is that it's an island, maybe a mountain sticking up through a cloud cover. (Experimenter checks, gives positive feedback.) Terrain seems rocky. Must be some sort of small plants growing there. Cloud bank to the west. Very cold. I see some buildings rather mathematically laid out. One of them is orange. There is something like a radar antenna, a round disc. (Subject draws map during report.) Two white cy- lindrical tanks,- quite large. To the northwest a small airstrip. Wind is blowing. Must be two or three trucks in front of build- ing. Behind, is that an outhouse? There's not much there. That's allY I think, for now. Swann submits map, Figure 5. On the following day, 1152-1215, the identical. protocol was followed for a second reading. Again, no maps were permitted. During this reading, Swann described following the coastline of the island., drawing segments on 8-1/2" Y 11" pieces of paper as he went., resulting in Figure 6 when the pieces were assembled. It's not completely dark there, sort of orangish light, If I look to the west, hills; to the north flatlands and, I think., airstrip and ocean in the distance; to the eastY rolling bumpy grasslands with bumps; to the south is -- I can't see anything to the south. I move north to the coastline and follow it around. That's point A (begins to draw map). Point B, rocks sticking up out of the ocean, breakers on them. Point C, little cluster of buildings with wharf., boats. Point D, jutty of land sticking out. Point F* is sand basin., river coming through, Lettering out of order. 13 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SECTION L DETAIL t FIGURE 5 MAP NO. 1 OF KERGUELEN ISLAND SITE (DETAIL-SWANN) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 tl NA U LA LA rA tl tl Ll tj Lj-" u I 001- Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO003 080 1' 2 2 7 ,V V FIGURE 6 MAP NO. 2 OF KERGUELEN ISLAND SITE (SWANN) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00099AO00300080001-3 'D SCO) K) ATE ?ZOUI@j 1173 IIX2 - $145 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 lots; of birds. Point E, brush of small trees. This is fun (laughs), first time I've ever done this. (Following E) almost a straight coastline cuts in rocks,, beach. Then curves back. I see to northwest a mountain rising, snow on top. Area G is irregular. Point H is a high cliff,,, Point I is a promontory. Point J has big breakers, K is a bay, L is area I drew yester- day (circles area, draws airstrip and buildings for orientation Lo previous map). That will do for today. May be a lighthouse (on tip?). 1 lacked courage going around Point G. e. Kerguelen Island Site (Price) Date: 20 July 1973. 1400 Menlo Park California Protocol: Coordinates 49020'S. 7001VE given by Dr. H. E. Puthoff to subject Price by telephone to initiate experiment. Price Response: On the morning of 21 July 1973 Price's written response (dated 20 July 1973* 2055-2232 Santa Clara California) was received (hand carried). Picked 15,000' altitude. Looking south, 40 east of south, see a site located on a cliff about @_00' high above the ocean. In- stallation is a cluster of buildings and radar tracking station (see Figure 7). Radar is a segment concave type rather than circular dish type. Building #1 is the largest, L-shaped, front facing NW, two stories plus basement. Buildings #2 and #3 about 75'-1-00' east of main building, also two stories plus basement. Building #2 has recreation and dining facilitiesP building #3 contains living quarters. Building #4 is a shop and maintenance area. Buildings are all interconnected on the ground floor. I see n dock area at the base of the cliff, and 1/4 to 1/2 mile from the buildings is an airstrip. The installation has four functions: 1) Ti-acking (space) 2) Meteorological station 3) Monitoring equipment for radiation readings 4) Radio relay station. I see a couple of other radar installations covered by geodesic domes. There are two small tracking radars interlinked with main radar. 16 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 FIGURE 7 MAP NO. 3 OF KERGUELEN [SLANE) SITE (PRICE) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I had the impression that the personnel (military and civilian) were Vrench, but since I could understand what was being said I assume personnel are American. Analysis of' Restilts, Mouble-Blind Ctient Coordinates) The results obtained with the double-blind client coordi- nates have been evaluated seoarately by the client. (See attached supplement. ) As an additional control with regard to the experimental protocol,, SRI personnel have not been informed before-, during, or after- ward of anv details of the target series parameters, including the hit- miss profile. However,, SRI personnel have been in-formed that in each experiment there have been at least some categories of information in which the data exceed anv possible bounds of coincidental correlation, and exceed any possible bounds of acquisition by known means. it has also been reported that some of the data possibly constitute noise" in the signal, but it has usually been difficult to negate totally anv information given by the subjects. that: Therefore. we conclude from this portion of the study A channel exists whereby information about a remote location can be obtained in the manner described. As with all biological systems the information channel appears to be imperfect, containing some noise along with the signal. While a signal-to-noise ratio cannot as yet be determined by SRI personnel with regard to client- controlled targets, a semiquantitative signal-to- noise ratio might be determined with additional experimental effort. B. EEG Exneriments One premise underlying our investigation is that paranormal func- tioning is distributed throughout the population in much the same manner as every other ability, and indeed in much the same way as intelligence Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 is distributed. We further conjecture that it is partially the "world view" of the times in which we live that prevents paranormal ability from surfacing to a greater extent. Our EEG program was initiated in an effort to determine whether objective physiological measures of paranormal functioning exist and to relieve the subject from the burden of having to demonstrate voli- tionally any sort of paranormal functioning. We inform our subjects that a light is to be flashed from time to time in a distant room, and if they perceive that light it may be evident from changes in their EEG output. This experiment tests the hypothesis that perception may take place and be measurable at noncognitive levels of consciousness, even though not easily expressed verbally. In our work with four female volunteer subjects, we have found evidence in three of their EEG spectra that they are influenced by the remote stimulus. Thus it appears from this exploratory work that we have a repeatable perception experiment that yields significant results even with unselected subjects. The experimental protocol for the experiment is as follows: A subject is seated in a shielded EEG monitoring room in the Life Sciences Building of SRI. A friend of the subject is seated in a remote room with the stimulus generator, in this case a strobe light. The EEG out- put is recorded from the vertexes and occiputs (regions of the brain) simultaneously from both participants. On each trial, a tone burst precedes by one second a ten-second train of flashes presented to one of the subjects designated as the "sender." The subject who does not see the flashes is designated the "receiver;" this subject also hears the warning signal. This signal evokes a contingent negative variation (CNV) in each of the subjects as they anticipate the occurrence of the flashes. Thirty-six such trials are given, each consisting of 12 null trials), i.e., 0 flashes/second, 12 6-11z flashes, and 12 16-Hz flashes intermixed in a random order. Each of the 36 trials consists of a ten-second EEG epoch. The EEG data are recorded on magnetic tape and digitized. The 12 data blocks associated with the 0, 6, and 16 Hz trials are averaged. A spectral analysis is then performed on the average. This analysis has given two types of results. In two subjects we have evidence of actual modulation of the EEG output at the flash fre- quency. The other (more consistent) observation is that the dominant alpha production of the resting subjects is pulled to higher frequencies during the 6- and 16-Hz trials as compared with the 0 flashes/second trials. 19 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 In summary, the fl receiver" subject knows when a trial period is beginning but does not know whether the light will be flashed nor what the flash frequency will be. However, from the accumulated EEG data, we tentatively conclude that there is evidence strongly suggesting that human subjects can directly--even though noncognitively--perceive remote stimuli not presented to any known perceptual sense, and the perception event can be recorded by an objective process. Figure 8 shows the averaged EEG for a subject attempting to perceive the remote stimulus. In.this case the twelve averaged trials are for the 6- and 16-Hz light. The spectrum indicates a significant (p = 0.05) in- crease in the 16-Hz component during the 16-Hz period. Figure.9(a) shows an overlay of the three averaged spectra for a different subject. Figure 9(b) shows the difference spectrum where the 0 trials data are electrically subtracted from the 6-Hz data. This difference curve shows a clear frequency shift in the dominant component of the subject's alpha (9-11 Hz) production. Of our four subjects, this subject had by far the most monochromatic EEG spectrum. Again the fre- quency shift obtained from comparing the stimulus versus nonstimulus trials was significant at the p = 0.05 level for the 6-Hz case and at the p = 0.005 level for the 16-Hz case. A second important use ofthe EEG technique is to allow a deter- mination to be made of what confidence level to place on what a subject reports that he is perceiving during the course of his remote viewing experience. Subjects taking part in these EEG experiments are asked to indicate their conscious feelings, on a trial-by-trial basis, as to which stimulus is being generated. They make their guess known to the experimenter via one-way telegraphic communication. An analysis of these guesses has shown a,correlation between the correct calls and certain characteristic changes in EEG output. These changes vary from subject to subject but appear to be constant for any one subject. Having observed this apparent correlation in exploratory workY it is important to continue this study further to determine its constancy. In experiments with Swann, the correlation took the form of a de- crease in monochromaticity of his alpha production when his verbal re- spons0s to a stimulus condition were correct. (In this experiment Swann was asked to determine whether a remote helium-neon laser was on or off.) In the course of this experiment there was thus an apparent correlation between the accuracy of his perception and his EEG production, even though his overall task performance in this particular experiment did not differ significantly from chance expectation. 20 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Ib 1i io (b) SENDER STIMULATED WITH 16-Hz FLASHES FIGURE 8 OCCIPITAL EEG FREQUENCY SPECTRA, 0 TO 25 Hz, OF JEAN MAYO, RECEIVER 21 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) SENDER STIMULATED WITH 6-Hz FLASHES Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 -0 6 16 H2 ;0 liz fa) THREE CASES-O-, 6-, AND 16-Hz FLASHES 02-TRIAL AVERAGE) FIGURE 9 OCCIPITAL EEG FREQUENCY SPECTRA, 0 TO 25 Hz, OF HELLA HAMMID, RECEIVER Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 10 !.1z (b) DIFFERENCE SPECTRA--6-Hz MINUS 0-Hz I Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 t I L@ I:r 4 1 24 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002110/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 In other work with Swann at the American Society for Psychical Research., Dr. Karlis Osis has reported that when Swann attempted to reproduce pictorially the contents of a hidden container, his EEG out- put would consistently shift from lower to higher frequencies. Swann was highly successful (eight out of eight) in this series of perception experiments. . It therefore appears that monitoring of the EEG may prove to be a good indicator as to the measure of confidence that should be placed in a subject's report about his perception of a remote scene. C. Remote Perception of Graphic Material The objective of this group of experimental sessions was to inves- tigate the apparent.paranormal perception ability of gifted subject Uri Geller under carefully controlled conditions with the goal of under- standing the physical and psychological variables underlying such ability. On each day of an eight-day experimental period, picture drawing experiments were carried out. In these experiments., Geller was separated from the target material either by an electrically isolatedY shielded room or by the isolation provided by having the targets drawn on the East Coast. As a result of Geller's success in this experimental period., we consider that he has demonstrated his paranormal perceptual ability in a convincing and unambiguous manner. Saturday, 4 August--Two drawing experiments were conducted this day. In both of these, Geller was closeted in an opaque, acoustically and electrically shielded room. This room is the double-walled shielded room used for EEG research in the Life Sciences Division of SRI. It is locked by means of an inner and outer door, each of which is secured with a refrigerator-type locking mechanism, as shown in Figure 10. The two drawings used in this experiment were selected by randomly opening a large college dictionary and selecting the first word that could reasonably be drawn. The first word obtained in this manner was fuse" and the object drawn was firecracker [Figure 11(a)]. All target selection and picture drawing was done with Geller already in the shielded room. Geller was notified via intercom when the target picture was drawn and taped to the wall outside his enclosure. He was continuously moni- tored by a one-way audio circuit. 23 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 0 (b) RESPONSE I X-70 W RESPONSE 2 FIGURE 11 TARGET 1 (FIRECRACKER) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 25 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Geller's almost immediate response was that he saw "a cylinder with noise coming out of it. I' His drawing representing his response to the target was a drum, along with a number of other cylindrical-looking objects [Figures 11(b) and 11(c)]. The second word selected was "bunch," and the target was a bunch of grapes. Geller's immediate.response was that he saw "drops of water coming out of the picture." He then talked about "purple circles." Finally, he said that he was quite sure that lie had the picture. His drawing was indeed a bunch of grapes. Both the target picture and Geller's rendition had 24 grapes in the bunch (Figure 12). In this work the target picture is never discussed by the experi- menters after the picture is drawn or brought near the shielded room. The intercom operates only from the inside of the room to the outside, except when the push7to-talk switch is depressed on the outside of the room. In our detailed examination of the shielded room and the protocol used in these experiments no sensory leakage has been found, nor has any defect in the protocol been brought to our attention. Sunday, 5 August--Geller is locked in the shielded room with one experimenter outside as a monitor while the target is drawn in the other experimenter's office about a half mile away. The target selected from the dictionary was an outline drawing of a man, which evolved through the drawing process into a devil with a trident @Figure 13(a)]. To start the experiment, Puthoff, who was with Geller, called Targ, who was with the drawing. Geller spent almost a half-hour working on the drawing before "passing," as he felt unable to get the drawing. We in- clude his efforts nonetheless for the insight into the process that they provide. His drawings [Figures 13(b)-13(d)] were as follows: it Moses' Tablets," i.e., Ten Commandments. Apple with a worm coming out of it, a snake was in the same picture, and the Tablets symbolism of the first drawing. Composite picture with the Ten Commandments on top of the world and the trident on the outside, along with a neatly drawn leaf. One is led to speculate that the Biblical representation in these three drawings is perhaps associational material triggered by the target. The inability on Geller's part to draw the do .vil may be culturally induced. 26 Approved For Release 2002/10121 : ClA-RDP79-0099A000300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 AV 4a) TARGET W RESPONSE FIGURE 12 'TARGET 2 (GRAPES) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 W."A" boa& wimb" bmLlu bum. Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 00 14 @N (a) TARGET 1b) RESPONSE I FIGURE 13 TARGET 3 (DEVIL) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 F1 mop Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 r ILO W RESPONSE 2 FIGURE 13 (Kill (d) RESPONSE 3 TARGET 3 MEVIL) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES (Concluded) Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 -J ar With regard to the target picture, Geller (lid draw the trident from the target picture, but he did not draw the man who was holding it. From.thig it seems clear that Geller does not simply copy lines from the target picture, but rather he apparently performs some mental pro- cessingr before drawing them. T)ie second target picture was drawn by an experimenter while he was inside the shielded room with Geller outside the room with another experimenter. In this case the target [Figure 14(a)] was a representa- tion of' the solar system. His immediate verbal reaction before drawing was cone of "snace." Geller's drawn response to the target while outside the room lFigure 14(b) coincides well with the target drawing. The block in the center of Geller's picture, according to his statement@ was his afterthought suggested by the movie 2001 and was drawn as an addition just before comparing target with response. Monday, (3 August--The experiment to be done this day was a pure clairvoyance task. A picture was drawn by a scientist outside the usual experimental group. The picture was locked in the shielded room before Geller's arrival at SRI. Geller was then led by the experimenters to the shielded room , and asked to draw the picture inside the room. He drew a number of pictures., all of which he rejected as not being appli- cable. He said that he got no clear impression and passed. The target was a rabbit, and nothing Geller drew in any way resembled a rabbit. It should be added that the picture was drawn by a scientist of whom Geller is not fond, and Geller asked at the outset if this was the case. The experimenters said that this was not the case, since they did not know who had drawn the picture. Geller felt vindicated to some extent when 'he found out that his initial guess as to the artist had been correct. 'Fu(---,sd,iv. 7 August--This day two target pictures were attempted with Geller in the shielded room. He was connected to an EEG apparatus to allow measurement of his brain waves at the time that he was attempting to perceive a hidden picture. The two target pictures were a tree and an envelope. He experienced difficulty., did not make a drawing that corresponded to either drawing, and passed. Also, he found it very difficult to hold adequately still to make good EEG records. The same skeptical experimenter who drew the rabbit was the EEG operator on this second unsuccessful day. 30 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 4f 4V (a) TARGET SG1A 101- PON W RESPONSE FIGURE 14 TARGET 4 (SOLAR SYSTEM) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 31 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 wednesday, 8 August--Three targets were drawn during the course of this day's work. In the first., the experimenters closed the outer door of the laboratory in which the shielded room is located (in addi- tion to the inner double doors) and worked in an adjoining room. The target picture in this case was a camel. Geller felt unsure and passed, but his first choice drawing was a horse (see Figure 15). The experimenters then returned to the room outside the shielded room and drew the second picture, which was the Golden Gate Bridge [Figure 16(a)]. Geller inside the shielded room drew some curved lines with some squares underneath [Figure 16(b)]. He said that he didn't know what the picture was and passed. The third picture was a flying seagull. Geller said almost imme- diately that he saw a flying swan over a hill. He drew several birds and said that he was sure that his drawing was correct., which it was (Figure 17). Experiments were conducted in the shielded room for six days; good results were obtained on four of the days when there was no openly skeptical observer present. Thursday, 9 August--The experiments were moved to SRI's Engineering Building in order to make use of the computer facilities available. After Geller was secured in a shielded room about 150 feet down the hall and around a corner from the computer room and placed under continuous monitoring, a picture of a kite was drawn'on the face of the TV scrr--n driven by the computer's graphics program. Shortly after Geller was notified that the picture had been drawn, he had the computer room called to determine if the target picture was a geometric picture or an object. By talking to an intermediary, who was ignorant of the target picture, we told him that it was an object. Geller's first drawing in this case was a square with the diagonals drawn in. He then also drew some trian- gular airplanes and passed. His first drawing was a good representation of the actual target picture (Figure 18). Friday, 10 August--Two pictures were drawn and stored in the com- puter memory so that no visible evidence was available in the computer room after the picture was drawn. The first picture was a church. The picture was drawn and stored in the memory of the computer. Geller's responses are shown in the attached collection of drawings (Figure 19). It appears that both of: 32 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET (b) RESPONSE FIGURE 15 TARGET 5 (CAMEL) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 33 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET 1b) RESPONSE FIGURE 16 TARGET 6 (GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 34 Approved For Release 2002/10121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Q E is) TARGET (b) RESPONSE FIGURE 17 TARGET 7 (SEAGULL FLYING) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 7 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET ja (b) RESPONSE FIGURE 18 TARGET 8 (KITE ON CRT DISPLAY) AND GELLER'S RESPONSE 36 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET % (b) RESPONSCi I W RESPONSE 2 FIGURE 19. TARGET 9 (CHURCH, STORED IN MEMORY OF TEXT-EDITING COMPUTER) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES 37 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 his attempts have some elements in common with the target drawing, but he had no idea that it was a church and he passed. The second target picture was stored on the face of the TV tube with the intensity turned off so that no picture was visible with the room lights turned on. Geller immediately drew an arrow under a rounded brick and then drew another arrow inside a suitcase. We consider the arrow in the suitcase similar to the target, which was an arrow through a heart (Figure 20). These latter two experiments admit to at least two hypotheses, which will require further work to differentiate: ~ Perception of information stored in the computer. ~ Perception of mental contents, since there were several people in the computer room, all of whom knew the nature of the target that was stored. A long-distance telepathy experiment was also done on 10 August. An East Coast scientist was called and asked to draw a simple represen- tational object for Geller to copy. [Following the experiment he indi- cated that he drew two peaked mountains with a sur, in the upper right.] Geller drew two arches side by side with a circle in the upper right. Geller's picture also had a train-like object running through it. We consider this to be suggestive of communication but not conclusive. Further v-ork along these Iines is indicated. 38 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (b) RESPONSE I FIGURE 20 TARGET 10 (ARROW THROUGH HEART, STORED IN COMPUTER GRAPHICS PROGRAM) AND GELLER'S RESPONSES Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (a) TARGET (c) RESPONSE 2 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 III PROPOSED PROGRAM A. Objective The objective of the proposed program is to investigate and develop techniques to enhance human perception of remote stimuli. Independent measures, such as EEG correlates, will be used wherever appropriate as an aid in performance evaluation and enhancement. B. Technical Approach Our past year's research has yielded considerable evidence that certain individuals have developed the ability to perceive accurately distant objects and scenes. In addition, it appears that ordinary subjects (not specially selected) can also perceive remote stimuli at a level of awareness sufficient to at least provide direct physiological output as to the nature of the stimulus. Therefore, SRI proposes to center a research program around gifted subjects who have successfully participated in our research to date, but also including unselected subjects. With these we shall endeavor to define possible limitations with regard to remote viewing. We shall be particularly attentive to the physical, physiological, and psycholog- ical parameters governing the phenomenon. We will use a variety of physiol ogical measurements to help both subject and experimenter to measure the accuracy and reliability of the subjects' descriptions. The overall goal of such a program is to make possible the separation of signal (veridical material corresponding to a given remote location) from noise (false internal information) so as to result in an ability that can be usefully applied. A detailed description of"the "method of approach" to be used in this research has been described in Section II of this proposal. The investigation that we propose here is an extension of the work just described, which we have been pursuing for the past year. We plan to continue to employ those methods and techniques that have yielded the greatest success in this recently completed research. 40 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I Approved. For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 C. Statement of Work (1) By working with gifted subjects and SRI-generated target materials, SRI will measure the accuracy of remote view- ing as a function of such variables as length of viewing time, target distance, and target complexity. Based on the data accumulated, SRI will attempt to define the characteristics of the information channel in terms of bit rate, resolution, and other parameters of interest. In order to determine the limits of the remote viewing ability, both pictorial and geographic target material will be used. (2) In order to discriminate against the possibility of an unknown experimenter/subject leakage channel, for some experiments the client will provide geographical targets unknown to the experimenters to ensure that the subject uses only a remote viewing channel in his determination of the nature of the target. (3) Following a lead provided by work at'another laboratory in which a subject could identify pictorial material even if the picture was only "mentally projected" onto a card in a sealed envelope, SRI will study the use of pictorial target material with a decreasing density scale from clearly visible to invisible in order to measure the accuracy of perception as a function of target density. (4) The EEG portion of the program will be directed toward the determination of physiological correlates of accurate remote viewing. Based on previous workY SRI will inves- tigate in detail the possibility that the frequency shift in the alpha peak can be used as a measure to gauge the reliability of perception of a remote stimulus. This and other measures that may become available during the course of study will be made available as feedback-to the subject to determine whether such information can be used to en- hance discrimination between correct viewing of a remote scene and false information. (5) SRI will continue and expand our study with subjects whose EEG patterns show direct frequency correlations with the flicker frequency of a remote stimulus. We will determine whether such a (generally unconscious) perception channel has sufficient reliability to serve as a possible communi- cation channel. If continuing positive results accrue, we will determine the effects of shielding and distance on the efficiency of this channel. 41 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 (6) The effects of the introduction of persons at the remotely viewed target locations will be investigated to determine possible enhancement or degradation of signal-to-noise ratio. (7) In view of the exploratory nature of the program, 15 percent of the effort will be set aside to explore, with the client's cognizance, avenues of research other than -those listed and that may surface during the course of the program. SRI proposes to provide approximately 28 man-months of professional effort with appropriate support toward accomplishment of the foregoing. D. Reporting Schedule Brief monthly progress letters will be delivered the tenth day of each contract month, following the previous month's activity. A final technical report will be delivered 13 months after the commencement date of the contract. Throughout this program the investigators plan to remain in close telephonic communication with the client. 42 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 IV QUALIFICATIONS OF STANFORD RESEARCH INSTITUTE Stanford Research Institute is an independent, nonprofit organiza- tion per4lorming a broad spectrum of research under contract to business, industry,. and government. The Institute, which was formerly affiliated with Stanford University ', was founded in 1946. Its operations include the physical and life sciences, industrial and development economics, management systems, engineering systems, electronics and radio sciences, information science, urban and social systems, and various combinations of disciplines within these fields. Stanford Research Institute has no endowment; payments by clients under research contracts and grants amount to approx1mately $70 million annually and are used to cover all operating costs. Such revenue also helps the Institute maintain the excellence of its research capabilities. SRI's facil.ities include more than one million square feet of office and laboratory space and incorporate the most advanced scientific equip- ment, including unique instrumentation developed by the staff. The bulk of these facilities and most of the research staff are located at the Institute's headquarters in Menlo Park, California. Regional office locations include Washington, D.C.; New York City; Chicago; Houston; and Los Angeles. Of SRI's total. staff of 2600, approximately one-half are in profes- sional and technical categories. Some 400 members of the professional staff have Ph.D. or equivalent degrees; 600 others have their Master's degree. The project leader and other research personnel who would be active in the proposed work are members of the Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory. This group currently occupies 40,000 square feet of labora- tory space, divided into many separate laboratory rooms, technicians' work areas, a machine shop, and a computer room housing a LINC-8 and related terminals and equipment. In addition, a well-equipped computa- tion center is available. The Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory employs a number of technicians and engineering assistants and has available electronics material and test equipment useful in the development and testing of 43 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 I Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 the teaching machines. Especially suited to the work described in the proposal are a number of shielded rooms with various instrumentation available. Finally, a backup team of psychologists and statisticians can be brought into the project on an internal counsulting basis. The proposed research will be conducted by SRI staff members within the Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory under the management of its director, Mr. Earle Jones. The principal investigator will be Dr. Harold Puthoff. Mr. Russell Targ, of the Electronics and Bioengineering Laboratory and Dr. Charles Rebert, a neuro-physiologist in SRI's Life Sciences Division will be co-investigators. Professor Gerold Feinberg of Columbia University and Professor Charles Tart of the University of California may be called upon to act as consultants throughout this program. In addition to the scientific personnel directly engaged in the research aspects of this investigation, Stanford Research Institute has established an internal technical advisory board. This board con- sists of several directors of SRI's operating divisions, together with our legal counsel, all under the chairmanship of the senior vice president for research. It is the function of this advisory board not only to make recommendations and approve or disapprove every new direction taken by the Institute in this research area but to monitor related ongoing projects as well. 44 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 EARLE D. JONES, DIRECTOR ELECTRONICS AND BIOENGINEERING LABORATORY INFORMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DIVISION Specialized professional competence Analysis and design of electronic-optical systems; design of television systems; facsimile systems, including bandwidth compression; electro- static printing Representative research assignments at SRI (since 1956) ~ Character generator for high-speed electrostatic printer ~ Delay line scanning techniques ~ High-density photographic recording of television information ~ Bandwidth reduction study for satellite cloud photographs ~ Design of bandwidth reduction system for facsimile ~ Development of communication line equalization system using automatic transversal filters ~ Color facsimile systems with electrostatic printing ~ Design of a new frequency synthesizer Other professional experience ~ Student engineer, Boeing Company; microwave airborne radar ~ Designer, Square D. Company; electrical equipment design Academic background B.S. in electrical engineering (1956), Georgia Institute of Technology; M.S. in electrical engineering (1958), Stanford University Publications and patents ~ "A Versatile Character Generator with Digital Input," 1959 IRE WESCON Conv. Rec. ~ "Character Generator for Digital Computers," Electronics (February 1960) ~ Six patents in electronic circuitry, character generators, frequency synthesizers, and electrostatic printing systems Professional associations and honors . Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers . Optical Society of America . Society for Motion Picture and Television Engineers . Eta Kappa Nu . Phi Kappa Phi . Tau Beta Pi . Phi Eta Sigma 45 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002110121 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 HAROLD E. _IPUTHOFF, SEN1IO? KESEARCH ENGINEER 1_1 N s , LECTRO' ICr AND BIOENGINEILPING LABORATORY I.,'l-CRIMIATIO17 SCTENCE AND ENGI"-1EERlNG DIVISION b-peciaZi2ecl' Professional competence funable laser research and development; quantuai eiectronics; electron 2Deain Levices; biofeedback and biomeasurement research Representative research assignments Develepment of tunable ultraviolet laser source for pollution studies and medical research Development of high-power tunable infrared laser source (50-250 microns) for materials research Assessment of potential of fiber optics and lasers for use in optical computers Develooment of biofeed!)ack monitors (GSR) for use in educational com- pUters and other man-mac-hine links Research and development in biofieid measurements Other profrssional experience ReSE!arch associate, Hansen Laboratories of Physics and lecturer, Depar,@ment of Electrical Engineering, Stanford University (1967-71); teaching, textbook author, and research supervisor of Ph.D. candidates in the area of lasers and nonlinear optics Consuitant on application of lasers to industrial and medical problems and r@2search assistant, Stanford University (1963-67) Lt., JSNF (1960-63); in-house research and contract monitoring on DoD (NSA) contracts concerned with the development of ultra hig"-&-speed (Gliz) computers Research engineer, Sperry Electronic Tube Division and Sperry Fellow, University of Florida (1958-60); design and testing of electron beam focusing systems for use in microwave tubes Academic background B.E.E. (1958) and M.S.E. (1960), University of Florida; Ph.D. in electrical engineering (1967), Stanford University PubZications and patents * Coaut'-or of textbook, @'undamentals of'Quantum Electronics, Wiley; 2 reference book contributions; 23 papers in professional journals; 14 national symposium papers; numerous technical reports * 2 patents Professional associations and honors Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers; Sigma Tau; Phi Kappa Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; Sigma Xi 46 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 PUBLICATIONS OF IbIROLD E. PUTHOFF W. W. lletcrson and H. E. Puthoff, "A Theoretical Study of Ion Plasma Oscilla- tions," IRE Elect. Devices, Vol. ED-6, p. 372 (1959). H. E. Puthoff , 11 Crossed-Field Focusing of a Hollow Cylindrical Electron Beam," M.S. Thesis, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida (January 1960). A. D. Sutherland et al., "on the Use of Periodic Electrostatic Focusing in Klystrons," presented at Int. Congress on Microwave Tubes, Munich, West Germany (June 1960). Also presented at 18th Conf. on Electron 'rube Research, Seattle, Washington (June 1960). 11. E. Puthoff, "Design of a Crossed-Field Electron Gun," presented at 18th Conf. on Electron Tube Research, Seattle, Washington (June 1960). H. E. Puthoff, "Scaling Matrix for the Analog Computer," NSA Tech. Jour., Vol. 7 (1962). J. T. Tippett and H. E. Puthoff, "The Status of Optical Logic Elements for Nanosecond Computer Systems,'' Proc, Pacific Computer Conf., Pasadena, Cali- f0rnia (March 1963). Also published in NSA Tech. Jour.., Vol. 8 (1963). It H. E. Puthoff, R. H. Pantell and B. G. Huth, Tunability of the Raman Laser," J. Appl, Phys., Vol. 37, p. 860 (1966). R. H. Pantell et al., "Mode Coupling in an External Raman Resonator Appl. Phys., 1_@ettersl Vol. 9, p. 104 (1966). 11 B. G. Huth et al., Characteristics of the Stimulated Raman Effect in an external Resonator," Proc. Sixth Int. Conf. on Microwave and Optical Generation and Amplification, Cambridge, England (September 1966). - _-, I. Q Quantitative Study of the Stimulated Raman Effect Using an Off- Axis Resonator," IEEE J. Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-2, p. 763 (1966). R. Pantell et al., "Theoretical and Experimental Values for Two, Three, and Four I I Photon Absorptions, J. Chem. Phys., Vol. 46, p. 3507 (1967). H. E. Puthoff et al., Near-Forward Raman Scattering in LiNbO 3, J. Appl. Phys., Vol, 39., p. 2144 (1968). H. E. Puthoff, "The Stimulated Raman Effect and Its Application as a Tunable Laser, Ph.D. Thesis, Stanford University, Stanford, California (June 1967). R. H. Pantell, G. Soncini, and H. E. Puthoff, "Stimulated Photon-Electron Scattering," IEEE J. Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-4, po 903 (1968). J. Gelbwachs et al., "A Tunable Stimulated Raman Oscillator," Appl. Phys. !rs Lette . Vol. 14, p. 258 (1969). 47 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 11 J. M. Yarborough et al. , Efficient Tunable optical Emission from NiNbO 3 without 11 a Resonator , Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 15, p. 102 (1969). 11 ri S. S. Sussman et al. , A New Source of Tunable Optical and Infrared Radiation, Proc. Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn International Symposium of Submillimeter Waves, New York, New York (March 1960). f, B. C. Johnson et al. , Power and Linewidth of Tunable Stimulated For IR Emission in LiNbO3," Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 18, p. 181 (1970). It it E. Amzallag et al. , Stimulated Raman and Polariton Scattering in UIO 31 J. Appl. Phys., Vol. 43, p. 3251 (1971). D. L. Hecht et al., "Dye Lasers With Ultrafast Transverse Flow," IEEE J. Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-B, p. 15 (1972). H. Puthoff and R. H. Pantell, Fundamentals of Quantum Electronics (John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, New York, 1969). Published in Russian by Mir Publishing House, Moscow, 1972. 48 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 -.:-,iYLLIS M. COLE, RESEARCH ANALYST !NFORMATION SCIENCE LABORATORY INFORMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DIVISION SpeciaZized professionaZ competence Author of mathematics textbooks; curricula developer and author of computer-assisted instruction courses Representative research assignments at SRI ~ Survey and analysis of instructional technology for ARPA ~ Development of curricula for Educational Laboratory at SRI .. Organized a continuing regional seminar on computer-assisted instruction Other professionaZ experience ~Mathematics teacher for secondary school students, elementary school students, and teachers ~Participated in development of elementary school mathematics.text- book series Sets and Numbers ~Writer-in-chief for computer-assisted instruction project to teach mathematics at Brentwood (elementary) School ~Project leader, curriculum author of project to teach computer pro- gramming to ghetto high school students via computer-assisted instruction ~Research associate, Institute for Mathematical Studies in the Social Science, Stanford University (1963-71) Academic background B.A. in mathematics (1962), Middlebury College; M.A.T. in secondary mathematics education (1963), Harvard University PubZications Coauthor, junior-high school -textbook series Sets., Numbers, and Systems; "CAI for Elementary Computer Programming: SIMPER, LOGO, and BASIC," Technical Report, Stanford University; coauthor of several SRI reports 49 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 CHARLES S. ],U7@@ERT, PROJECT SUPh"RVISOR PRO@-RAM , - " '1-D- I - - SC1L'4C'ZS DIVISiON Sp-eciaLized professionaZ con-petence Physiolo7,ical psychology, especially the relationships between electro- physioloav and behavior; DC potentials; single and multiple units; animal behavior; electrical and chemical brain stimulation; experi- mental design and statistics Representative research assig?vnents at SR1' (since 1968) ~Development of human EEG laboratory ~Development of mosquito olfaction laboratory ~Studies on DC potentials in humans, monkeys, and cats ~Spreading depression in t1ae brain ~Olfactory-trigeminal interactions ~DC and multiDle unit responses ~Electrophysiology of paranormal perception Other professionaZ experience ~ Research assistant, Division of EEG and Neurophysiology, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Iowa ~ Instructor, University of California Extension; courses included Introductory Psychology; Phe Electrical Activity of the Brain; Man and His Brain: A Survey Academic background A.B. (1961) and M.A. (1964) in psychology, San Diego State College; Ph.D. in physiological psychology (1968), the University of Iowa Publications . Author, of 22 scientific publications Professional associations ~ American EEG Society ~ Neurosclence Society 50 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21,: CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 PUBLICATIONS OF CHARLES REBERT D. A. Irwin, J. R. Knott., D. W. McAdam, and C. S. Rebert, "Motivational Determinants of the 'Contingent Negative Variation," Flectroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 21, pp.538-543 (1966). D. W. McAdam, D. A. Irwin, C. S. Robert, and J. R. Knott, "Conative Control of the Con- tingent Negative Variation," Electroenceph. Clin, Neurophysiol, Vol. 21@ pp. 154-155 (1966). C1. S. Robert, D. IV. McAdam, J. R. Knott, and D. A. Irwin, "Slow Potential Change in Human Brain Related to Level of Motivation," J. Comp. Physiol. Psychol., Vol. 63, pp. 20-23 (1967). D. W. McAdam, J. R. Knott, and C. S. Robert, "Cortical Slow Potential Changes in Alan Related to Interstimulus Interval and to Pre-Trial Prediction of Interstimulus Interval," Psychophysiology, Vol. 53 pp. 349-358 (1969). J. Kaplan and C. S. Robert, "The Effect of Pressurized Air in Establishing Discriminative Response Suppression in Stump-Tailed Macaques," Behavior Research Methods and Instrumenta- tion, Vol. 6, pp. 262-263 (1959). C. S. Robert, "D. C. and Multiple Unit Recording in Lateral Geniculate Body of the Cat," Proc. American Psychological Association Convention, Vol. 77, pp. 215-216 (1969). C. S. Rebert and D. A. Irwin, "Slow Potqntial Changes in Cat Brain During Appetitive and Aversive Classical Conditioning of Jaw Movement," Electroenceph. Clin. Nourophysiol., Vol. 27, pp. 152-161 (1969). D. A. Irwin and C. S. Robert, "Slow Potential Changes in Cat Brain During Classical Appetitive Conditioning of Jaw Movement Using Two Levels of Reward," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 28 pp. 119-126 (1970). C. S. Rebert, "Spreading Depression in Squirrel Monkey Lissencephalic Cortex," Physiol. and Behav., Vol. 51 pp. 239-241 (1970). C. S. Rebert, and J. 11. Knott, "The Vertex Non-Specific Evoked Potential and Latency of Contingent Negative Variation," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 28, pp. 561-565 (1970). H. Stone and C. S. Rebert, "Observations on Olfactory and Trigeminal Interactionsy" Brain Researchy Vol. 21@ pp. 138@142 (1970). C. S. Robert, 11 The Effect of Reaction Time Feedback on Reaction Time and Contingent Negative Variationy" Psychophysiology, Vol. 91 pp. 334-339 (1972). C. S. Robert, "Cortical and Subcortical Slow Potentials in the Monkey's Brain During a Preparatory Interval," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 33@ pp. 389-402 (1972). E, D. Davis and C. S. Rebert, "Elements of Olfactory Receptor Coding in the Yellow Fever Mosquito," J. Econ. Entomol., Vol. 65 pp. 1058-1061, (1972). G. T. Steinmetz and C. S. Rebert, "Post-Reinforeement Changes of Steady Potentials in Premotor Cortex of Monkeys," Physiol. Behav., Vol. 9@ pp. 769-772 (1973). 51 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 C. S. Rebert and K. G. Sperry, "Subjective and Response-Related Determinants of CNV Amplitude," Psychophysiology, Vol. 10, pp. 139-144 (1973). C. S. Rebert, "A Technique for Simultaneous Measurement of DC and Multiple Unit Responses," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 34, pp. 324-326 (1973). C. S. Robert and D. A. Irwin, "Simple Electrode Configuration for Chronic or Acute Record- ing of DC Potentials from Subcortical Nuclei of the Brain," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 34, pp. 440-442 (1973). C. S. Rebert, "Some Elements of a General Cerebral System Related to CNV Genesis," in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.), Event Related Slow Potentials of the Brain: Their Relation to Behavior, Amsterdam: Elsevier (1973, in press). C. S. Rebert and J. J. Tecce, "A Summary of CNV and Reaction Time, in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.), Event Related Slow Potentials of the Brain: Their Relation to Behavior, Amsterdam: Elsevier (1973y in press). C. S. Rebert, "Further Analysis of CNV and Reaction Time," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Abstract (1973, in press). C. S. Rebert, "Slow Potential Correlates of Neuronal Population Responses in the Cat's Lateral Geniculate Nucleus," Electroenceph. Clin. Neurophysiol., Vol. 35, pp. 511-515 (1973). C. S. Rebert, "Slow Potential Changes in the Monkey's Brain During Reaction Time Foreperiod," in IV. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.) Third Congress on Event Related Slow Potentials (1974, in press). C. S. Rebert, G. T. Pryor, and J. Schaeffer, "Slow Cortical Potential Consequence of Electroconvulsive Shock in Rats," Physiol. Behav. (1974, in press). C. S. Rebort, R. Berry, and J. Merlo, "DC Potential Consequences of Induced Muscle Tension: Effects on Contingent Negative Variation," in W. C. McCallum and J. R. Knott (eds.) Third Congress on Event Related Slow Potentials (1974, in press). 52 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 RUSSELL TARG, SENIOR RESEARCH PHYSICIST ELECTRONICS AND BIOENGINEERING LABORATORY INFORMATION SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING DIVISION Specialized professional competence Development of new gas lasers; FM laser and supermode laser techniques; laser noise reduction; optical modulation and demodulation; experi- ments in new gaseous laser media; microwave diagnostic techniques; microwave generation from plasmas Professional experience ~ Sylvania Corporation (1962-72); investigation of techniques for development of new gas lasers, making use of his research with com- pact, self-contained multi-kilowatt C02 lasers ~ Technical Research Group (1959-62); experiments in new gaseous laser media ~ Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn; assisted in the establishment of the Electron Beam Laboratory ~ Sperry Gyroscope Company, Electron Tube Division (1956-59); experi- mental work in microwave generation from plasmas; early work in the technology of ultrahigh-vacuum and ion-pump design Academic background B.S. in physics (195L@), Queens College, New York; graduate work in physics (1954-56), Columbia University, New York Publications and inventions Author of "Optical Heterodyne Detection of Microwave-Modulated Light," Proc. IEEE (1964); coauthor of numerous articles on lasers and plasma oscillations Invention of the tunable plasma oscillator at microwave frequencies Professional associations and honors ~ IEEE; American Physical Society; The Optical Society of America ~ Awarded the position of research associate with the Polytechnic Insti- tute of Brooklyn 53 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 It D. E. Caddes, L. M. Osterink., and R, Targ, "Mode-Locking of the C02 Laser , Appl. Phys. Letters,, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 74-76 (1 February 1968). R. Targ, J. M. Yarborough, and J, M. FrenchI "Frequency Stabilization and Noise Suppression in the Argon FM Laser, 11 IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-41 pp. 644-648 (October 1968). W. B. Tiffany, R. Targ, and J. D. Foster, "Kilowatt CO 2 Gas-Transport Laser Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 15, No. 3 (1969). W. B. Tiffany, and R. Targ, "The Gas-Transport Laser--A New Class of High-Power Electro-Optic Devices," Laser Focus, pp. 48-50 (September 1969). R. Targ and W. B. Tiffany, "Gain and Saturation in Transverse Flowing CO _N He 11 2 2- Mixtures, Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 15, No. 9 U November 1969). It S. E. Schwarz, T. A. deTemple, and R. Targ, "High Pressure Pulsed Xenon Laser , Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 17, No. 7 (1 October 1970). J. D. Taynai, R. Targ, and W. B. Tiffany, "An Investigation of Tellurium for Frequency Doubling with C02 Lasers," IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-7 (8 August 1971). It. Targ and M. W. Sasnett, High Repetition Rate Xenon Laser with Transverse Excitation," IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-8, pp. 166-169 (February 1972). R. Targ and M. W. Sasnett , 11 Xenon-Helium Laser at High Pressure and High Repeti- It tion Rate, Appl. Phys. Letters, Vol. 19, No. 12 (15 December 1971). 1. R. Targ, "Pulsed Nitrogen Laser at High Repetition Rate , IEEE J. of Quant. Elect., Vol. QE-8, pp. 726-728 (August 1972). 11 R. Targ and D. Hurt, Learning Clairvoyance and Precognition with an Extrasensory Perception Teaching Machine , Parapsychology Review, pp. 9-11 (July 1972). 55 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG113 Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/ DP79-00999AO00300080001-3 DD/S&T 3697-73 MEMORANDUM FOR: Director of Central Intelligence SUBJECT: Office of Research and Development and Office of Technical Service Paranormal Perception Research Project .1. It is recommended that a research and development investigation of paranormal perception phenomena be initiated with Stanford Research Institute (SRI). A proposal for such an investigation is attached. Since this is a tightly directed advanced research project, it is further recommended that the effort be jointly funded and monitored by the Office of Research and Del relop ent and the Office of Technical Service. The Project Officer wi*1 h,-l The estimated cost for the 'A proposed effort isi 2. The objectives of the proposed effort are four-fold. Approximately 50% of the effort will be directed towards the investigation of the oppor- tunities for the operational use of "gifted" individuals; twenty percent will be directed towards establishing those characteristics which will enable us to identify "gifted" subjects; twenty percent will be directed towards invest'igation of the neurophysiological correlates of paranormal activities; ten percent will be directed towards validation of paranormal experiments. 3. A previous OTS project, summarized in the attached proposal, indicated the existence of paranormal perception phenomena. The phenomena include remote perception of documents, objects, activities, and locations. The demonstrated reproducibility of such remote perception under controlled conditions strongly suggests these phenomena are and will continue to be interesting to the intelligence community for either offensive operational exploitation or defensive threat assessment. 4. The proposed effort will be in the Statement of Work section of these are: (a) Characterization of concentrated in the areas described the attached proposal. In summary the remote perception abilities of Approved For Release 2002/10/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG1A Approved For Release 2002/10/21.'@ ~CIA',RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 7 DD/S&T 3697-73 gifted subjects, with emphasis on those characteristics of most importance to intelligence matters such as resolution, in-formation transfer rate and accuracy; (b) Correlation of physiological respon,-,es to reliability and accuracy of paranoyliial perception; (c) Enhancemeilt of those abilities which seem to be most useful to the intelligence community; and (d) Exploration of new avenues of research discovere-d during the course of the program. 5. The proposed project is well suited to a joint effort by t'ie Office of Research and Development and the Office of Technical Service. The proposed investigation is a tightly directed advanced research project. It involves the exploration of demonstrated phenomena to determine the significance and limitations of remote perception abilities of "gif@ed" individuals for intelligence coliections. Necessarily a parallel ei"fort elucidating the fundamental nature of th-e paranormal perception phenomena is proposed. This fundamental information is required in order to Ievelop an orderly comprehensive program which would lead to the basic understand- ing essential for the full exploitation of the phenomena for intelligence activities. It is expected that the combination of attitudes and experi- ences represented by OTS and ORD will produce timely relevant resulL'-.s and insure an objective assessment of the significance of those results. 6. The recommended project should be completed by Stanford Research Institute. SRI has produced some of the most significant investigations in paranormal phenomena. This has occurred because of the philosophies and abilities of the principal investigators. These investigators have established competence in the physical sciences and in paranormal phenomena research. They have been responsive to past OTS directives and are willing to investigate intelligence related applications. SRI has given these invest igators the institutional integrity and facilities necessary to achieve creditable research in both the public and a more restrictive private domain. 7.1 Although the controversy associated with paranormal research may create some unique security problems, they are not insurmountable. These problems include embarrassment of being involved in an assumed fraud; the potential adverse propaganda associated with the use of psychic mind altering or control techniques, and the fact that some subjects may be of questionable stability. These potential problems can be controlled 2 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 '@IA -4-IP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/2t-,", :@I. - 7 - 1/ "IT 3 6 .1 of tivp@ 1,-@Otiwjtlon rind inti:_@,arity of the princtial investi -,@Ie Inve'-ticator's cnd thp ln@tltute OAvft@ solid rft-@Ajtations @i V, TwC I vom r i Z_ rAubI let.tioa 0 c-@oor r,- d '.@ rA4 t S S @I d C 10 ;1 j i i A v u I (A b,:, i i e,, .,aruers of , @,@e i@,fU -C@ it! cre(Jil)flity tilis ef -,Crt, a flexible to otiwl c-ecunt,,,@ I'alici cm,0d be ii!@ple::m4ted as tl,@@e:ned nece@,Isav@y. SG1 I S-.,_Ience and i,cci,11101 Orly APPROVED: M r4,_@Ctor Distribution: Original & 1 -Addressee I - PMS/ORD 1 - CIPIG/OTS I - Executive Registry I - OPPB 2 - DD/S&T Registry 1 - BSXA/ORD 1 - B&F/OTS 1 - LSR/ORD File I - CWTS File 1 - LSR/ORD Chrono 1 - CB/OTS Chrono I - ORD Chrono I - OTS Chrono LSR/ORD/DD/S&T:F (23 November 1973) Approved For Release 200211-0/21 CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 SG1B Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3 Approved For Release 2002/10/21 : CIA-RDP79-00999AO00300080001-3