%7Jk000&592*-k AXved F6rAi4eoolpeA?ser4fdlld~IYO-oy^~PSI-CE)J 41 /f "VISAGES": A COMPUTER-BASED TEST OF FACE PRECOGNITION MARIO VARVOGLIS 1& MICHEL-ANGE AMORIM LABORATOIRE DE RECHERCHE SUR LES INTERACTIONS PSI A computer-based psi experimen' ': was conducted to explore whether subjects could precognlze the features of a randomly composed face. The experiment was based upon a subset of the id "Photo fit" Kit used by police to help identify the facial charact.eristIcs of a missing person or a criminal. Forty subjects participated, each contributing a minimum of four runs (16 trials). Subjects were presented with 4 target packs each containing 16 different Instances of a particular facial feature (eyes, nose, mouth and facial-outline with hair). The Instances for an each element were grouped, so as to suggest different ts degrees of resemblance between t Ihem, and, hence, between the subject's choice and the tacget. our There were two task-modal I ties. In the Scanning psi task -ion instances were arranged as a 4 x 4 Image array, allowing the subject to consciously choose a particular Image using the computer "mouse". In the Timing psi task, the images were rced. presented in a rapidly shifting here the subject could only choose when to stop the "Image roulette" with the -nd mouse. Once the subject had chosen all elements of the face, the program randomly selected an Instance for, each of the four elements, constructed the target face, and presented it to the subject. in the I Results were evaluated through goodness-of-fit tests, .e Over comparing the obtained distribution of hits, for 5 different ecijic levels of scoring, against the expected distribution. The global test yielded a significant Chi-square for the :.ion. experimental condition (p=.013), and chance results for a LCate5 simulation study. Further analyses, examining scor-Ing under .4n the two dI f f eren t task-moda I I t I es, y I e I ded a significant of, Chi-square for the Timing task modality alone %f&cbFoO Raftas~P200=8115 :dMk-'RlDP96*GPMGOM1ftGOOqt3 338 Approved For Release 2000/08/15: CIA-RDP96-00792ROO0701060001-3 FIGURE -4: MEAN FEEDBACK SCORES FOR 40 SUBJECTS M . .... .. ... .. ... . . ... .. . E A N s 10 C 0 0 R E 7 -- 8 6 3 8502 133 5 L 19 21 39 30 Jb sa 'WU MEAN SCORE BASED UPON: 4 RUNS:* 5-9 RUNS: X 10-14 RUNS: Table 1: scoringlevels Frequency of hits for 5 ' for Experimental and trials Simulated DIR PAIR ROW H.PGE MISS CHI-SO !~4 DF EXPECTED 53 53 106 212 424 SIMULATION so 56 112 213 417 .799 EXPERIMENTAL 60 36 88 238 426 12.632 Table 2: Frequency hitsfor levels of 5 scoring for and Timing Scanning task modalities DIR PAIR ROW H.PGE MISS CHI-SO (4 DF EXPECTED 26.526.5 53 106 212 SCANNING 33 20 4-17104 220 4.207 T I ", I N '13 27 16 41 134 206 14.453 Approved For Release 2000/08/le3blA-RDP96-00792ROO0701060001-3 Approved For Release 2000/08/15: CIA-RDP96-00792ROO0701060001-3 aesthetic criteria, SubJects consistently selected certain Instances and avoided other ones; whereas one would expect each Instance of a particular element to be chosen about an equal number of times - specifically 106/16, or 6.625 times- there were Instances which had been chosen just once or twice, and others chosen 15 or even 20 times!. By comparison to the conflicts Induced by the scanning task, the timing task was effortless and entertaining. Given that all subjects went through both conditions, it is possible that the significant timing-task result simply reflects a preferential effect: this condition may have faced better because subjects perceived It as less frustrating. Alter- natively, Insofar as subjects had little control over their selections during the timing-task, and just had to press the button when they felt the time was "right", they were less prone to counter-productive psychological sets (e.g., trying too hard) and more apt to adopt a passive, "goal -oriented" approach. The study"s results may be seen as analogous to those of RNG-PK studies suggesting the superiority of goal- oriented over process-oriented strategies (Morris, Nanko and Phillips, 1979; Levi, 1979), or of hidden RNG-PK tasks over explicit ones (Berger, 1988; PRL,1984; Varvoglis, 1989). It should be noted, though, that the specific distcibution of scores In the timing task does not lend Itself to any simple Interpretations . It is not clear why hitting should manifest at a level at which it is least rewarding, and at which psi-information Is least useful. Similarly, it is not clear why the trend toward missing (most apparent in the overall results) should manifest at the pair-level, at which psi-information was quite precise, and a hit, presumably, quite rewarding. CONCLUSION a d n e 0 )f ie in ,ie it nd of It is obvious that this study's results, though significant, are not 'particularly encouraging for psychic criminology applications. The overall patterning of experimental scores seems to have been due to a combination of hitting and missing, with the most conspicuous hitting occurring at too low an informational level to be especially useful. On the other hand, It should be stressed that the task was as removed from real psychic criminology as could be - involving repeated trials, "normal" subjects, and fictional faces, rather than a single trial by a "psychic" attempting to describe a dangerous criminal. Also, insofar as the procedures encouraged Subjects to focus upon facial-features rather than upon the face as a whole, our tasks may have been simply too elementaristic to fairly assess the utility Of faces as psi targets. Be that as It may, we are looking to shift our approach with Visages. Leaving aside psychic criminology, for now, we are :E1 ) e rqffrf q 341 y resp nz)e iases whic Approved For Release 2000/08/15: CIA-RDP96-00792ROO0701060001-3 block subjects/ receptivity to psi information would render them -effective PK agents. Next time, 'rather than asking participants to fight their. feelings and preferences and response biases, we/re going to tel I them to go for It, and (try to) have it their-'way ... 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