Academia Embraces Spooky Studies 
By Randy Dotinga

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,69086,00.html

02:00 AM Oct. 11, 2005 PT

At the University of Arizona, a psychology laboratory devotes its time
to investigating "dynamic info-energy systems" and a "survival of
consciousness hypothesis." University of Virginia cardiologists have
been studying whether heart patients enter "transcendental
environments" in the operating room. Meanwhile, a psychiatrist
colleague compiles records of alleged "transmigration" events from
around the world.

Translation? At two of America's best universities, professors and
doctors are studying the existence of the soul, near-death experiences
and reincarnation.

Sure, plenty of scientists throughout history tried to uncover the
mystery of life after death, from Aristotle to Thomas Edison, who took
time off from activities like electrocuting an elephant to contemplate
a megaphone for the dead. But current-day afterlife research? At
accredited institutions of higher learning? Who knew?

Science journalist Mary Roach, author of the new book Spook: Science
Tackles the Afterlife, said that institutions are looking at the
debate over the existence of the afterlife and declaring, "'We can
study it, we can apply principles of peer-reviewed research, we can do
it.' People say, 'Yes, we can figure it out.'"

Roach is a natural-born skeptic based in Oakland, California. She
became interested in soul science while writing her best-selling 2003
book, Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, in which she briefly
touched on the bizarre story of Dr. Duncan MacDougall, the New England
doctor whose findings were immortalized in the title of the 2003
Benicio del Toro movie 21 Grams.

MacDougall assumed the soul has mass, and figured he could measure it
by putting a dying consumption patient on a scale. At death, the
weight of the soul would presumably leave the dearly departed's body;
in one experiment on a dying man, 21 grams seemed to vanish, joining
the patient's dignity in the ether somewhere.

Roach loved this turn-of-the-century example of "American can-do
spirit," even though MacDougall's work was discredited and he's now
known as a bit of a nutball. So Roach set out to chronicle the history
of afterlife research and the related field of afterlife-research
debunking. Among other things, she made forays into topics like
"vaginally extruded" ectoplasm (don't ask) and how infrasound might
explain ghostly visions.

Nowadays, the study of the afterlife is a fringe subject in academia,
Roach said. "There's very little of it going on," she said. "It's hard
to get funding for legitimate research these days, and you can imagine
(the struggle for) something as seemingly frivolous as parapsychology."

Even so, your taxpayer dollars -- and a private grant or two -- are
supporting paranormal studies. "There are people who think it's
outrageous that money is being spent on such a stupid topic, and
others that feel like it's an important question that medicine or
psychology should address," Roach said.

At the University of Arizona, for example, researchers at the
innocuously named Human Energy Systems Laboratory -- with a total
annual budget of about $500,000 -- have been busy asking psychics to
pose questions to dead people. One subject was Allison DuBois, who
inspired the NBC show Medium. The center is also looking into topics
like "energy healing" and "non-contact therapeutic touch."

"Our work is in three areas: The first is really controversial, the
second is very controversial and the third is super controversial,"
said psychology professor Gary Schwartz, the center's director.

In that third category is Schwartz's new medium-by-e-mail project,
which is now recruiting psychics. Researchers will talk to relatives
of the dead and then e-mail questions about the deceased to mediums.
According to Schwartz, the mediums won't know any details about the
dead person other than his or her name. (Perhaps the world of the dead
has its own handy 411 service?)

Researchers will then compare the medium's answers to those provided
by the same medium to questions about another deceased person.

For example, a medium might get e-mailed questions from "Jim" about
his dead wife "Abigail" and from "David" about his dead wife
"Victoria." The questions, according to Schwartz, will be along the
lines of, "What did Abigail look like?" and "What did Abigail die of?"

If Jim looks at the two sets of answers -- without knowing who's who
-- and picks those about his wife, that will be a sign that the medium
may be onto something, especially if similar experiments beat the odds.

The University of Virginia's Division of Personality Studies is
another hotbed of afterlife inquiry. It's home to both near-death
studies (why do people have visions on the operating table?) and a
researcher who compiles reports of children who talk about their past
lives.

Have these researchers actually found anything to suggest the
existence of a soul or afterlife? Schwartz said his research with
about 20 mediums proves that some do indeed have a connection to the
dead, or at least a way to glean details about them.

"Some mediums get information, and it's not fraud, it's not cold
reading, it's not through any conventional mechanisms," said Schwartz,
who's written a new book tied to NBC's Medium.

Nonsense, scoffs über-debunker Michael Shermpublisher of Skeptical
Inquirer magazine and a Scientific American columnist. He thinks
paranormal studies are a failure.

"After a century and a quarter of serious scientific research without
any reliable, consistent, repeatable positive results, what's the
point of continuing to spend money, energy and research time on the
subject?" he asked. "If they haven't found something by now, they're
probably not going to."

After traveling from India to England in search of everything from
ghost hunters to reincarnation trackers, Roach has her own thoughts on
the matter of paranormal research. She was taken aback a couple times,
especially during a personal encounter with DuBois, the Medium medium.
And she's intrigued by near-death research that suggests there may
actually be something to patient visions.

Despite those glimmers of something concrete, Roach reports being
"profoundly disappointed" that paranormal research isn't more
convincing. Still, "I'm more open to the possibility that we haven't
figured it all out," she said. "Science doesn't necessarily have all
the answers." 





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