Science Vs - Telepathy: Is It For Real?
Episode Date: April 17, 2025A popular podcast called The Telepathy Tapes claims that telepathy is real — and tons of people are convinced. So we open our minds to the possibility of mind-reading and ask: Could this be real?? A...nd if not — what might be going on here? We dive into the science (yes — there is science!) with Dr. Katharine Beals, Prof. Jim Todd, and Prof. Chris French. Find our transcript here: https://bit.ly/ScienceVsTelepathy In this episode, we cover: (00:00) Extraordinary Claims of Telepathy (08:28) What Could Be Going On Here? (32:27) 50 Years of Science on Telepathy?! This episode was produced by Rose Rimler, with help from Wendy Zukerman, along with Ekedi Fausther-Keeys, Meryl Horn, and Michelle Dang. We’re edited by Blythe Terrell. Mix and sound design by Bobby Lord. Fact checking by Erica Akiko Howard. Music written by Peter Leonard, Emma Munger, So Wylie, Bumi Hidaka, and Bobby Lord. Thanks to all the researchers we spoke to for this episode, including Dr. Zoltan Kekecs, Prof. Stefan Schmidt, and Janyce Boynton. Special thanks to Enrique Perez. Science Vs is a Spotify Studios Original. Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, I'm Wendy Zuckerman and you're listening to Science Versus.
This is the show that pits facts against feeling like you can read someone's thoughts.
Today we are talking about telepathy.
And here with me is Science Versus senior producer, Rose Rimler.
Hi, Rose.
Hi, Wendy.
So, by telepathy, we mean the concept of beaming thoughts
directly into someone else's brain
or being able to read other people's thoughts.
Mm-hmm, yes.
That's an idea that's been around for centuries,
but it's having a bit of a moment right now,
probably because of this very popular podcast
called The Telepathy Tapes.
Yes, I am hearing a lot about this podcast. Yes, yes, yes, add telepathy Tapes. Yes. I am hearing a lot about this podcast.
Yes, yes, yes.
And Telepathy with it.
Yes.
It was the top podcast on Spotify earlier this year.
It actually knocked Joe Rogan off the number one spot briefly.
And it's all about how Telepathy is real.
You know, a very clever friend of mine texted me about this show and she thinks Telepathy
is real now.
Exactly.
It's very convincing.
Yeah.
If you look at the comments, you'll see people saying, this is revolutionary.
This has moved me to tears.
I'm a believer.
My life has changed because of this podcast.
And so, you know, I was very curious and so I listened to it.
I listened to the whole thing.
Wendy, I know that you haven't listened to it.
No, that's right.
We decided I wouldn't listen.
So hopefully I can stand in for those of you
who also haven't listened.
Okay, so let me tell you the premise.
This show is about a very specific group of people.
This is people with autism who are very limited
in how they communicate and who require a lot of support.
And the show says that people in this group are able to communicate telepathically with
their family and with teachers and other people.
And in fact, here is the show's tagline.
They play this at the beginning of every episode.
For decades, a very specific group of people have been claiming telepathy is happening
in their homes and in their classrooms.
And nobody has believed them. nobody has listened to them. But on this podcast, we do.
Okay, that's a podcast hook.
It really is. So, Kai Dickens, that's the host, that's who we just heard from. She is
typically a documentary filmmaker, but she heard about this phenomenon and she wanted
to study it, document it.
And so she ends up visiting a lot of people who have had this experience with autistic people in their lives.
Here she is again on the podcast.
And what touched me the most is these parents were grappling with something that they believed to be absolutely impossible.
But here they were. They were watching something unfold that had no rational explanation. And so Rose, as you were listening to this podcast, what were you thinking?
Well, the stories were interesting and honestly really intriguing. Obviously, there's been skeptics
here saying that something else is going on to explain this. So I wanted to find out what
exactly was happening.
And I got especially curious when
I heard a scientist interviewed on the show say this.
Over the last 50 years, there's been a huge amount
of research on telepathy published
in peer-reviewed journals, which has proved to be repeatable
and seems to me irrefutable in that it's showing
that telepathy really happens.
The problem is that the critics simply aren't interested in the evidence
because their belief system is that this is impossible.
And I was like, wait, what?
50 years of research in peer-reviewed journals, repeatable, irrefutable. I was like, I gotta look into that.
Like, that's what I wanna pull up,
that 50 years of research in peer-reviewed journals.
A hundred percent, a hundred percent.
And that's what I've been doing the last month or so.
And it turns out scientists have been studying this
for some time and I learned a lot of really
Interesting stuff wendy like this has just been so fascinating to work on it's been surprising
It's been infuriating
Sometimes it's fun. So there's like a lot to unpack here and i'm just like excited to tell you about it
Great. It's all coming up after the break to the right. She thinks her dress is why he wouldn't stop staring.
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Welcome back.
Rose is here to talk about telepathy inspired by this hugely popular podcast,
The Telepathy Tapes, which has really brought this topic back into the zeitgeist.
So Rose, where do we begin?
Okay, so first we're going to talk about some of the specific claims made in the show,
the telepathy tapes.
Then we're going to zoom out and talk about the body of research that scientists have done
on telepathy.
Great. Let's do it.
So the show is about people with autism who are non-verbal or who speak very little.
And what you hear over and over again on this podcast is that their family can never speak to them
or really communicate with them until they learn this method of communicating where the non-verbal person
points at letters on a board or picks at keys on a keyboard.
And essentially they learn to painstakingly spell out words and communicate that way.
Okay.
And then all of a sudden,
this is where the telepathy comes in,
they start spelling out things that they shouldn't know.
So they'll tell their parent,
oh, I know that you went to Target today.
But the parent's like, I never told them that I was at Target today
Or they might say I know that you brought me cookies for a snack
But you left them in the car and that person's like I never told you I was gonna bring you cookies
I didn't tell you I left them in the car
How do they know these things and they start thinking this person can read my mind, huh?
So if that was all the podcast offered,
these little anecdotes, or there could
be a million little explanations, or coincidence,
or luck, you know?
That wouldn't be that interesting.
But where it gets really interesting
is that the host of the show doesn't just take people
out their word for this.
She goes and she specifically does tests to test that they
are, in fact fact telepathic.
What kind of tests?
Well, so for example, in the first episode, she goes to visit a young woman from Mexico
who is supposedly telepathic with her mom.
And so like I described, this is a non-verbal autistic person
who communicates by pointing at a board with letters and numbers on it.
Right, right.
And so this is the kind of test that Kai sets up.
So she'll show something only to the mom,
make sure the daughter can't see it.
And then she asks-
Something like a cat, a picture of a cat.
Yeah, or like in this example, a picture of a pirate.
OK.
And the daughter can't see it.
Sometimes she's blindfolded or they'll
put a partition between the mom and the daughter.
So the daughter can't see the picture.
But then the mom says,
okay, what am I looking at? Read my mind. What am I looking at?
And we hear, and I'll play a little bit for you.
The daughter, even though she can't see the picture,
she starts pointing at letters and she slowly spells out.
Remember, this is a picture of a pirate or pirata in Spanish. P-I-R-A-T-A.
She clearly types P-I-R-A-T-A, which spells pirate in Spanish.
I love this moment because the crowd just goes wild.
At this point, everyone in the room
had had their mind blown.
Christina, what are your thoughts?
I mean, I wouldn't do it as a skeptic.
I'm generally a skeptic in my life.
Who's this talking?
This is the cameraman.
To see this, I can't,
it's hard for me to not believe this is authentic.
I'm looking at everything.
I'm watching her, I'm watching the mom,
I'm watching her. I'm watching the mom. I'm watching everything.
For me and my perspective, it's real.
Aha. That is impressive.
Yeah. Hearing that, hearing the cameraman's reaction is
pretty compelling because you're like, wow,
he was actually in the room and looking carefully, and he said it seemed real.
But the thing is,
when autism experts hear about this,
they immediately see a problem.
Okay.
It goes back to how people are communicating and
the history of people trying to
communicate with those who can't speak.
I talked about this with Catherine Beals.
She's an adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania and elsewhere. with those who can't speak. I talked about this with Katherine Beals.
She's an adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania
and elsewhere.
And I talked to her specifically about this case.
So does this impress you?
No, it's just, I find it extraordinary
that anybody thinks it's a compelling instance of telepathy.
Well, she's kind of the perfect person
to talk to you about this.
I started out as a linguist.
That was my PhD.
And then I had a child with autism.
The particular situation I'm in is actually
kind of the perfect storm.
The perfect storm to see what's actually going on here.
And Catherine says, we got to go back a few decades.
Actually, the story starts in Australia, Wendy.
You'll be happy to know.
I feel right at home. Someone there had invented a special way for people who can't speak to communicate.
And in the 90s, this technique spread from Australia to the US.
And it really took off here.
It's a bit different from the way people are communicating in the telepathy tapes.
With the letter board.
The letter board.
This is called facilitated communication.
Here's how it works. The non-speaking person sits in front of, you know, some kind of keyboard.
Right. Next to them is a facilitator who gently holds their arm or their wrist and helps them
select the letters on the keyboard that they want to select.
So it's a bit faster than them having to do it all by themselves. Is that the idea?
Not exactly. For some of these folks, they actually need someone to help guide their
hands to the letters to use the keyboard, or they don't do it at all.
Oh, okay.
And so once this method's starting being used more and more, these incredible things started happening.
The claims were pretty extraordinary because these individuals who appeared to be completely
nonverbal and maybe not attending to people speaking and language in general were suddenly
able to produce grammatically well-formed sentences, perfectly spelled in many cases,
and quite sophisticated in many cases, in some cases poetry, sophisticated vocabulary.
So it appeared to unlock what was people were thinking
was an intact or fully developed intellect
in terms of having learned somehow to read,
having mastered language and so on.
This idea that they can't speak beautifully,
but locked inside their brain is this huge mastery over the English language
that until now they were not able to express.
Exactly.
It's sort of this idea.
Yeah. As you can imagine, that's a huge breakthrough,
right?
And it got a lot of attention.
It was all over the news.
It was on TV.
There was a primetime live episode.
It eventually won an Emmy.
Diane Sawyer reported on this as this breakthrough.
And you can hear how powerful this seemed.
And now a story about hope.
For decades, autism has been a dark mystery,
a disorder that seems to turn children in on themselves
against the world.
Tonight, however, you are going to see something
that has changed that.
Call it a miracle, call it an awakening.
I mean, so hopeful if you're a parent
to be looking at your trials and thinking,
wow, there's so much in there, if only I could find a way to communicate.
Yeah, your child has never spoken to you, has never said, I love you.
And now there's this thing that says there's a lot going on in their head
and they can tell you about it.
I do have to say, as hopeful as this is, I am getting a Ouija board vibe here.
Yeah.
That is a concern that people were actually people from the beginning.
Some people did have that concern because you're holding someone's arm and potentially moving
it for them even if you don't think you are.
So it could be that the facilitator is controlling what this person is typing.
Yeah.
Not, not, not meaning to necessarily just wanting to move through it faster.
And they're like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
D, oh, you probably mean dog. Let's go there.
Exactly, that kind of thing.
And there's always some skeptics out there, but for a while,
because this is just so cool to people, they just kept chugging along.
But then the crack started to show in these very dramatic ways, because in some cases,
people were spelling out very disturbing messages.
Some of their stories were told in a frontline documentary.
It was called Prisoners of Silence.
It came out in 1993.
And here they are talking about a teenage girl
with autism named Betsy.
One day, using a letter board, Betsy and her facilitator wrote that everybody in her family,
her father, mother, grandparents, and brother, were sexually abusing her.
Social services were called, Betsy was taken out of her home, put in foster care,
an investigation was started.
But the people working this case were like, can we really trust these allegations?
They came from this unusual technique.
Someone else is holding Betsy's hand and helping her point out letters tight.
So what they wanted to know was,
who is writing the messages?
Is it the autistic person or is it the facilitator?
So they set up tests for Betsy and Katherine described the kind of tests that they did.
You might have a divider between the facilitator and the person they're facilitating,
and the person they're facilitating sees a picture of a hat,
and the facilitator sees a picture of a shoe.
This is the telepathy type test.
Kind of, with a key difference. They're showing two different pictures.
They're showing one picture to the facilitator, so in this example, a picture of a shoe,
and one picture to the person with autism,
in this example, a hat.
And then you ask the person with autism,
what do you see here?
What you would want them to write would be hat.
Yes.
And if they type shoe, then where did that come from?
Very fishy, because that's what the facilitator saw,
not what they saw.
Yes.
Yes.
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Right.
Right.
The frontline documentary is really useful because it actually shows what these tests were like and
They talk about what happened when they ran tests like this with Betsy
When Betsy was shown a picture of a dog she didn't type dog but sneakers
What the facilitator saw?
When Betsy was shown a boat she didn't type boat, but sandwich What the facilitators saw.
And that happened in every test they tried. Every single test.
Of Betsy or in studies as well?
In studies as well.
Every single test? Yes, there was an autistic program in New York that had been using
facilitated communication with 12 of their autistic students, getting good
results they thought, but they said, oh maybe we should test this, make sure. They
tested each student in the same way. I asked Katherine what happened. And they
didn't get a single correct response. Not one. Yeah. And this has been repeated
many times. There were a whole bunch of studies that came out in the 90s that just one after another
after another were showing failure.
How often do they find it was in fact the person with autism who was doing the communicating?
In well-designed studies, not at all.
Never.
Never.
Right.
Wow.
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
Yeah.
So in the case with Betsy, the investigators concluded that the sex abuse allegations were
totally unfounded.
And so, do we know why the facilitator was doing that?
Yeah, in the Betsy case, we do know what's going on here because the facilitator came
out and talked about it, wrote a paper about it. And she explained that, you know,
she'd had some doubts in the beginning, like,
oh, am I really, am I moving Betsy's hand,
or is it really Betsy?
It's kind of hard to tell.
But there was so much momentum,
and it was so exciting to think that she was making
breakthroughs with her student,
that she kind of let herself believe in it.
Oh, okay, so it's almost like this subconscious response,
the facilitators. I mean, if they're not actually doing it on purpose,
I would have thought it was just really just trying to help, trying to communicate.
Yeah, I think that's usually what people think is going on.
It's actually called the ideomotor effect, the Ouija board.
You don't... Everyone thinks they're not...
Well, I don't know. I would sometimes move the planchette on purpose.
But many of us...
Just think we're not moving
it, but then it does move.
And especially, it might move to a letter that makes a lot of sense after the previous
letter and how does that happen?
There's also something called the chevrolet pendulum illusion, where you think you're
holding the pendulum steady in the air, but when you think about moving it to the right
or to the left or up or down, suddenly it starts moving that way.
And you're like, I'm not even doing that.
But it's just like your brain is sending
these very tiny signals to your hand.
And that is enough to make very small movements
that can have very big consequences, you know?
Uh-huh, so can we go back to the telepathy tapes now?
Yeah, because just to be clear,
these abuse allegations we're talking about,
that's part of the frontline documentary,
not the telepathy tapes.
Yeah, yeah, okay. So then to go back to that Pirata example, the pirate.
Exactly, yeah. So that's the question, right? Is that what they're doing?
Did the kid have a facilitator on hand?
Yes. In all of these cases, the person with autism is speaking via facilitator.
It varies in exactly what the facilitator is doing and how they're communicating, but
there's always somebody else there that has to be there.
It's not fully independent.
And it's typically the parent who's the facilitator.
Oh!
Yeah.
So the-
The one who's supposed, mine is being read.
The mum is looking at the pirate and also holding her kid's hand.
Well, yes and no.
So what they're doing in the telepathy tapes is not technically facilitated communication
in the classic sense because they're not literally holding the person's hand and hovering it
over a board.
What they're typically doing in the telepathy tapes, they hold up a
letter board and then the person with autism points and then they call
out PIR. And in fact, the host of the podcast, she says, she just say at one
point like, oh there was this controversy with facilitated communication, but this
is different, this is different. And the big thing that they point out is we're not really touching the kid in the same way that they were touching them before.
This method is often called spelling to communicate or just spelling.
Mmm. So what does Catherine say about that?
Well, she points out that, you know, it's problematic that the facilitator is also the transcriber of the message. Like if you're holding a letter board,
A, you can move it around slightly,
and B, you can say,
you've selected the letter P.
Now you've selected the letter I.
That gives you a lot of latitude in
deciding where exactly the person's finger went.
So they will decide when a letter was selected,
and they'll decide in an ambiguous case
which letter was selected. Because someone could be in an ambiguous case which letter was selected.
Because someone could be pointing in between the letters F and G.
In between.
And in some cases, believe it or not, nowhere near.
And so there are videos where you can actually, the person is using a transparent letterboard,
so from watching from the other side, you can see letters sometimes being called out
that we're not pointing to at all.
And also, they are often touching.
So like there's a hand on the back or in the case of the mom and the daughter from Mexico,
the mom is often touching the daughter's forehead or holding her chin.
In the telepathy tapes, did you watch the videos?
I did.
So there are videos available for some of the tests.
You have to pay a small fee and become a member, but it's on their website.
And I did watch them. In fact, I watched some of them with Catherine.
I didn't see any obvious examples where you see someone pointing at a T and the facilitator calls out P or something like that.
But it's clear from these videos that typically the facilitator is really involved in one way or another. So we watch one where the daughter is sitting next to the mom, but they have a
partition between them.
The mom is shown a random number generator on someone's iPad and this random
number 978 is generated.
Here I'm watching it with Catherine.
The mom sees that the number is 978.
They take away the partition.
She's kind of gently touching her on her forehead. Yeah, and here she's got the letter board up.
Yeah, so what you could clearly see was that the mother was touching the girl, just not,
didn't happen to be her finger, and that there were changes in how hard she was, in her pressure,
the pressure that she was exerting
on the daughter's temple and cheek.
And so that might have been all that was needed
to cue the girl about when to actually make a selection.
And this, I mean, it doesn't need to be intentional, right?
I mean, you could be doing this without even realizing it.
Easily, we know that's true. And actually, the fact that this could be doing this without even realizing it. Easily. We know that's true.
And actually, the fact that this could be subconscious
really explains a lot, I think.
If the person facilitating is spelling out their own thoughts
but doesn't realize they're spelling out their own thoughts,
that explains why they might genuinely think,
oh my God, this person is reading my mind.
Mm, of course.
But there was one case that didn't really make sense, and I couldn't figure out how it was possible. This is a young autistic man and his mom.
He seems to be able to read his mother's thoughts by typing them out independently on a keyboard.
So in this case, no one's holding up a letter board for him.
Kai describes them as not touching.
And I watch the videos online.
And that's true.
There's nobody.
They aren't touching.
So their telepathy really does look pretty convincing.
So for this, I called up Jim Todd.
He's a professor of psychology at Eastern Michigan University.
And I teach conditioning and learning in general.
The basics of behavior, the kind of basics of behavior that you kind of need to know to parse some of this stuff out.
Like with Catherine, I watched one of these videos with him.
Can you see my screen?
I can see your screen, yes.
So in this video, the son is sitting next to the mom, and he has like an iPad sort of device
that when he touches the letter,
the device says the letter out loud in like this robot voice.
Uh-huh.
So in this test, the mom is shown an image.
The son can't see it. It's a picture of a crocodile.
Okay.
And the son is asked to spell out what his mom can see.
And we can see him pick out letters on this device,
and the computer starts asked to spell out what his mom can see and we can see him pick out letters on this device And the computer starts spelling out crocodile
Mom is moving her hand in her body in sequence with the letters. It's just signaling
Do you want to see the tape, Wendy?
Yeah, I want to watch it. Yeah, yeah.
Okay. So Kai shows the...
The mom.
...a picture of a crocodile.
Did you see it?
Did you see what Jim is... what Jim saw?
From the mom.
Uh-huh.
She played again. Okay. And look at the mom, not the son. Uh-huh. She played again.
And look at the mom, not the son.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Oh yeah, she's moving her hand.
Every time he moves a, he selects a letter
just before that she has moved.
She's moving her hand and in a very deliberate way,
whether she is conscious of that deliberateness,
but it's not, it's not, yeah, oh yeah, for sure.
Did you ask her why didn't she move them?
Away from each other knowing what she clearly knew about facilitated communication
I did reach out to Kai to ask specific questions like that
But her team said that she was too busy working on season two of the celebrity tapes and making a documentary about it as well
So she couldn't get back to us. Well, that's very frustrating.
Yeah. I also reached out to the mom in the crocodile video and I didn't hear back from her either.
OK. So I don't know.
I don't know. I mean, I will say in the episode, they say a lot of stuff about how, oh, we can do this across the room.
And then they start to do that.
But then the son becomes uncomfortable and doesn't
cooperate and so they say, well, he needs to sit next to his mom for the emotional support.
So stuff like that happens.
I mean, what's sort of, I guess, interesting is there is some lovely communication happening between
the parent and the child.
It's not telepathy, but clearly they have learnt a language with each other that when
the parent touches the kid or makes this signal with their hand, they point to a letter.
I mean, they have a language together.
And that there is sort of something lovely about that, I guess.
You can make that argument.
I mean, in that video we just saw, it does seem like the young man is having a good time,
like enjoying being with his mother.
But I've seen plenty of other videos from other sources
that showed this technique where it doesn't really
go that way, and Catherine has too.
A lot of the time the child doesn't look like
they really want to be doing this.
You know, I have noticed that, but I don't really understand
necessarily what I'm seeing.
I don't know much about people with severe autism.
So when you see someone like kind of trying to get away
or calling out or saying, I'm sad, there was a video of a girl who was or calling out or saying, I'm sad.
There was a video of a girl who was doing this and she went, I'm sad.
That seems like she's saying she's sad.
She doesn't want to be doing that.
It certainly does.
And in fact, a professional organization called the American Speech Language Hearing Association
has explicitly said, don't use these methods of communicating,
this facilitated communication, the newer ones that are sometimes called
like spelling to communicate or rapid prompting method, don't use them.
This stuff happening on the telepathy tapes.
Yes, and one reason why is that they say these methods strip people
of their human right to independent communication.
So does this put a cap on the telepathy tapes then?
Well, yeah.
As far as the whole people with autism are telepathic thing,
because the show goes on to say a lot of other stuff, extraordinary stuff.
But all these extraordinary claims,
they're all hinging on this supposition that the folks with autism can send messages to their parents or their teachers.
But we know now that the way they are doing this is with these like letterboard methods or similar methods that are totally bunk.
And we can't trust that it's the kids' message coming through.
In fact, we shouldn't expect that to be the case
based on all we know about how unlikely this is to work.
Yeah.
It's like the fruit, the podcast keeps creating more fruit
but the tree is rotten.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, I can't wait for season two then.
I don't know if I'll be listening. Um, but you know, this doesn't put a cap on our episode because there is a lot more to talk about
when it comes to the science of telepathy.
There's a lot to tell you. I did promise you that, right?
That's right. All of these repeatable studies over decades of research.
Yeah, and I looked into that.
So after the break, I'm going to tell you about the pretty bonkers way
that scientists have tried to test for telepathy
and the results that are actually quite surprising.
Coming up.
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Hey, Rose.
Hey, Wendy.
Our first question comes from Kelsey on Instagram, and she asks,
how do you wade through all the misinformation and
inaccurate information to get to the truth?
Ooh, love this question.
Because I feel like we do so much homework on this show that no one gets to see.
So when someone asks this kind of question, I'm like, yes!
For me, when I'm making an episode, my first step is to go online and try and understand what is the misinformation.
Or at least what people
are saying about a particular topic. A diet for example, you'll start to see
people are saying that it makes them smarter and gives them all this energy
and makes their body look a certain way and so I'll start to turn that into
scientific questions. Does this diet affect your brain? How does it affect
your body? And then I'll just dive into the scientific research and
start chatting to scientists.
And I won't stop until I feel like the answers have really
started to coalesce where I feel like I've got the scientific
consensus or as close to it as possible and now I can start to
build an episode.
Sounds good.
Someone named Nishala, also on Instagram, she asks,
have you ever considered doing stand-up?
There is talent here.
Oh!
Ha!
Thank you.
So I actually did stand up a couple of times.
Whoa!
Yeah, when I was doing a job I didn't really like,
and I wanted to put some fire up my a**.
Yeah, just urgh!
Mmm-hmm.
Here is why I do not do stand-up comedy anymore.
Because Rose, would you like to hear the one joke that I remember?
From your routine?
Yeah.
Yes, I do.
Something like this.
Something like this.
Okay, so.
Tuna are so amazing. Aren't they these amazing creatures?
They're just so majestic in the ocean, just so beautiful.
And it's amazing that evolution created this creature
that swims in a little capsule with lemon and pepper.
All in there.
So it's so convenient that we could just eat it all up.
That's five out of 10, I'd say, maybe.
We'll let Nishala be the judge of that one.
All right, let me know.
Did I make the right call?
Sticking with Science Channel.
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Thanks, Wendy.
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Welcome back.
Rose just told us why we really can't believe the telepathy
you might hear about on the telepathy tapes.
But now we're going to broaden out to the land of how science has tested telepathy.
Rose?
Yeah.
I talked about this with Emeritus Professor of Psychology, Chris French, until
recently, he was the head of the Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit at
Goldsmiths University of London.
Okay.
Anomalistic psychology means stuff outside the norm, maybe even the paranormal.
Right, right, right.
I accept that there are some really interesting and challenging ideas out there for skeptics.
I mean, some of the evidence isn't easy to dismiss.
And certainly, when you get skeptics who say there is no evidence for
the existence of telepathy or precognition and so on, that's just nonsense.
Chris has spent much of his career looking at paranormal stuff in a rigorous way.
So he tries to figure out if it's real or if there's a more mundane explanation.
So you're a professional party pooper?
I am indeed. Yeah. I don't get invited to, well, I don't get invited to parties at all because of my
overwhelmingly negative personality.
Okay. So one common way to test for telepathy involves something called the Gansfeld protocol.
It's based on the idea that if there is such a thing as telepathy involves something called the Gansfeld protocol. It's based on the idea that if there is such a thing as telepathy, it may well be that
it's a very, very faint signal in comparison to all the background noise.
So the Gansfeld protocol, and by the way, Gansfeld is German for whole field.
So the experimenters set someone up in a very controlled, very subdued environment so that
the telepathic signal has as much of a chance as possible to come through.
So the people in the experiment will wear headphones with white or pink noise playing.
They make sure there's nothing for them to see by putting on these goggles on their eyes.
They look like half ping pong balls, one over each eye.
And you obviously, light could
still get in there through the gaps so you use cotton wool just to plug that up
and then you tape over the eyes and then you have a red light bulb so if they
open their eyes all they'll see is red. So it's not that you've got no sensory
input but you've just got a uniform sensory input and it basically it's a
very very nice comfortable relaxing situation to be in.
And people typically report that after a while, they relax and their head begins to fill with imagery.
You know?
Mm-hmm.
And at this point, someone sends an image of a pirate crocodile.
Yeah, exactly.
So someone's in another room.
In another room.
In another room and they're looking at an image or maybe a video clip.
And they're really focusing on it and they're really trying to send it to the other person.
And the sender would try to concentrate on that target image and send the information to the receiver.
Just by thinking about it really hard.
Just by thinking about it real hard, exactly.
So then after some time,
the person takes off their silly ping pong goggles,
comes out of the room,
they're shown four images or four video clips,
and they say, which is the one that was being beamed to you?
So they pick one. So if you were just picking by chance,
you would get this right 25 percent of the time. time. But lots of these studies find that people pick the right image or the
right video clip more than 25% of the time.
How much more?
32% of the time.
Okay.
That number comes from a meta-analysis that came out just last year. They looked at over a hundred experiments done in the Gansfeld condition over the last 50 years.
Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
It includes some studies on clairvoyance and other psychic phenomena tested using
the Gansfeld protocol, but it's mostly tests of telepathy. And the authors
concluded that there was a small but statistically significant effect here.
That is intriguing.
That's not all. You can find something similar with other tests that have been done,
like these telephone telepathy tests. You tell people that they're going to get a phone call
from one of four specific people, and they have to guess as the phone is ringing which of these
four people is the one calling them. By chance, they should get the right person 25% of the time.
A lot of studies find they get it right more often than that,
30 or 40% of the time.
So what do you, what does Chris make of this?
Well, so this meta-analysis, this Gansfeld one,
it made a big splash among the telepathy crowd.
No doubt.
It was definitely referenced on the telepathy tapes podcast.
And so I asked Chris about it. Did it rock your world? the telepathy crowd. No doubt. It was definitely referenced on the telepathy tapes podcast.
And so I asked Chris about it.
Did it rock your world?
No, because I've had my fingers burnt with metronalysis before.
I mean, metronalysis, I think is, you know, is a very useful tool.
And I think we should take this latest metronalysis seriously.
But whether or, whether I'm going to say yes, okay, I'm convinced now, I'm going to hold
back a little bit because there have been so many twists and turns in this tale.
Yeah. This isn't Chris's first radio and it's not his first Gansfeldman analysis claiming
a 30% hit rate. He said that there was actually something very similar back in the 90s. He
was younger, more naive then, right?
And I read that and thought, oh my God, wow, this really looks like very powerful evidence.
So what are these analyses doing wrong?
Well, there's a few funny things that are going on here.
So we know that in studies about paranormal stuff, if the test is done by a believer, they tend to find an effect.
While if it's done by a skeptic, they tend not to find an effect.
Like imagine that you're more of a skeptic like Chris and you run one of these telepathy
Experiments and you find that people guess right 25% of the time as a skeptic when you get a result like that you might say
Okay, all right. No effect here done, right? If you're a believer you might look at that and say
I'm gonna go look through the data again again. I would have expected something else to happen.
So I'm going to go and I'm going to look through the raw data.
Maybe I'll get rid of some outliers.
Maybe I'll find a piece of
the data and I'll just look at this subgroup.
Bob wasn't really concentrating during the experiment.
Yeah, I'm going to look at his data.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Yeah.
And vice versa. If you're a skeptic and you get
a result that says telepathy is real,
you might start combing through that data very carefully, you know?
Mm-hmm, right, yeah.
So to avoid this, there has been a movement,
and this is especially true in psychology research,
to pre-register your study.
So you basically publish a protocol ahead of time,
saying, this is how I'm going to do the study, this you basically publish a protocol ahead of time saying,
this is how I'm gonna do the study,
this is how I'm gonna analyze my data,
and then that can't happen, right?
This like tweaking and nudging after the fact.
Well, less so.
Less so.
Yeah.
And when you look at that meta-analysis,
they're not looking specifically at studies
that were pre-registered.
So it's really hard to know if we can trust them.
Oh no, this makes me so sad.
I'm like, scientist, do your job properly.
I know.
Well, funny you should mention that
because not long ago, there was a very concerted effort
to do a proper study on psychic phenomena.
Okay.
So specifically, they were trying to replicate a study
from 2011 on precognition, so like
predicting the future, basically.
Yes, yes, yes, yes.
The way this study worked, they had a computer program they were showing to people with a
picture of two curtains, and they asked people, of these two curtains, which one has an erotic
image hiding behind it?
Oh.
So that people would guess, and then, only then, with the computer program, assign the erotic
image randomly to one or the other slot.
Oh, so this was, you were trying to, oh, predict what the computer would do.
Yeah.
And unknown, and unknown basically.
Yes.
Okay.
Wow. And unknown, and unknown basically. Yes. Okay, wow.
In the original study, people got this right
more than 50% of the time.
Which the author suggested could mean
they were actually predicting the future.
Sure, okay.
There was a lot of attention on this study at the time.
No doubt.
Yeah, and skeptics said, you know.
Can I just ask, if you got it right?
Did the curtains open and then you got to see the willy?
I believe so, yes.
Or whatever.
They actually controlled for people's sexual preferences.
So if you wanted to see a willy, you might get to see a willy.
If you wanted to see a booby, you might get to see a booby.
Okay, so they replicate this study. Yeah, so because a lot of skeptics
said like, we don't like this part of your methodology or this thing you did
about your stats, what basically happened is that the skeptics and the believers
got together, designed a new research protocol, designed a new study they both
agreed on, they pre-registered it, they said this is the protocol we're gonna
use, great, this is and this is how we're gonna do it, how we'reistered it. They said, this is the protocol we're going to use. Great. This is how we're going to do it and how we're going to analyze it.
Yes.
It took five years.
It took 10 labs participating.
Wow.
Thirty-ish authors, skeptics and believers working together to look to see, is there
an effect here?
Wow.
A new future is possible.
And what did they find?
When all this was said and done?
It produced absolutely no effects whatsoever to support the existence of precognition.
Okay, that's the suggestion being if we were to rigorously test telepathy, putting the
skeptics and believers all together, perhaps we would see the same effect, but I guess
we don't.
We don't have the same exact thing for telepathy, but a lot of the issues that this precognition
study we're confronting are very similar to issues that people have with telepathy research.
So I don't know, I think it's pretty damning to telepathy as well, but would love to see
a similar group effort doing some of these studies. Can I ask, what is the mechanism, the purported mechanism of telepathy?
I was hoping you wouldn't ask me that.
Are they reaching for quantum physics here?
Yes, they are.
Quantum entanglement specifically, which is about this weird connection between subatomic
particles where they seem
to influence each other and it doesn't matter how far apart they are.
And I did actually talk to a physicist who I was referred to by someone who's sort of
telepathy friendly as a physicist who's also telepathy friendly.
He's open-minded about it.
And I asked him, does quantum entanglement,
could that explain how telepathy works?
And he said, no.
And I said, do we have any known physical explanation
for how telepathy could work?
And he said, no.
And he's like, look, maybe it happens,
but if it's happening, it's happening outside of physics
as we understand it.
And I'm open to that.
Well, that's what I'm open to,
like there's stuff about the spirituality
we don't understand.
So, where does this leave you, Rose?
Alright, so, especially considering that there's no known mechanism that this could work.
Looking at the research, the Gansfeld, the telephone telepathy stuff,
you've got to believe one of two things.
One is that the telepathy vibes are there. They're just very weak and very fickle.
Or you can believe that there are no vibes.
What do you think, Wendy?
Weak fickle vibes or no vibes?
I mean, I think that the vibes,
when people say they're experiencing something like telepathy
are like intuition and other human vibes that are not paranormal is what I would, whether
it is a parent who loves their child, their nonverbal child so much, and there is some communication there,
and there's something nice being shared, it's just not paranormal. And when two friends,
one calls the other and one says, oh my God, I knew you were going to call. They probably
haven't spoken in a long time and they love each other and there's some intuition there, which is beautiful.
We don't need to reach for quantum physics or telepathy.
We can just reach for our common humanity to explain this.
Yeah, which I think we underestimate when we come up with a paranormal explanation.
The human mind, the human body, common shared humanity,
you know, whatever that is, like that is impressive enough
to produce a lot of these incredible things
that happen between people.
And that's good enough for me personally.
Do you want to try, all right,
we've been working together for a long time.
Do you want to try send me a, think of an image,
think of an image.
Okay, I'm looking...
How about this?
I'll look at a painting on my wall.
Okay.
I'm looking at it really hard.
Wendy, I want to send this image to Wendy.
Okay, okay.
So the first thing going through my head is what image would Rose have on her wall?
But that's not...
That's cheating.
Because then I'm immediately thinking, that!
Jellyfish, bird.
Okay, but what image is... All right, I'm immediately thinking, dad! Okay, okay. Jellyfish, bird. Okay, but, what images?
I'm going to close my eyes.
I don't have ping pong balls, but I close my eyes.
Okay, what?
Are you thinking about it really hard?
I don't think you're thinking about it hard enough, Rose.
You're thinking about other things.
I'm furrowing my brow.
Okay, is it an ocean view?
No, no, no, no, no.
A cat, a cat. No, but you know what's so funny? is it an ocean view? Um, no, no, no, no, no, a cat, a cat.
No, but you know what's so funny?
It's an ocean?
No, you mentioned a jellyfish, you mentioned a cat.
I do have pictures of both those things in my apartment.
I just am not having, that's not the one I'm looking at.
I'm looking at a painting of flowers, poppies.
Oh.
The cat picture's right here.
So if I'd happened to look this way, you would have gotten it right.
And we would have been like, holy s***.
All right.
How many citations in this week's episode?
This week we have 51 citations.
51. And if people want to see them in all of their glory, read more about telepathy.
Where should they go?
They can click on the link to our transcript.
That's where all the citations are.
And that link is in the show notes.
Excellent.
And if anyone wants to send us any curtains and let us try and guess what kind of erotic images behind them.
Did you just ask people to send us dirty pictures?
Curtains.
Rose, I've asked them to send us pictures of curtains.
Pictures of curtains.
You can find us on Instagram at science underscore vs.
You can say hello to me on TikTok. I'm at Wendy Zuckerman.
Thanks, Rose.
Thanks, Wendy.
This episode was produced by Rose Rimler with help from me, Wendy Zuckerman, along with the Keddie Foster Keys, Meryl Horne and Michelle Dang.
We're edited by Blythe Terrell.
Mix and sound design by Bobby Lord.
Fact checking by Erika Akiko Howard.
Music written by Peter Leonard, Emma Munger, So Wiley, Bumi Hidaka and Bobby Lord.
Thanks to all of the researchers that we spoke to for this episode,
including Dr. Zoltan Kekec, Professor Stefan Schmidt and Janice Boynton.
Special thanks to Enrique Perez, Isabel Lura, Lindsay Chana, Lily Kim,
and Lauren Silverman.
Science Versus is a Spotify Studios original.
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