Tweeting my way to a scientific breakthrough

Tweeting my way to a scientific breakthrough

Comment on these stories at www.NewScientist.com/opinion Lawrence Krauss is director of the Origins Initiative at Arizona State University and the au...

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Comment on these stories at www.NewScientist.com/opinion

Lawrence Krauss is director of the Origins Initiative at Arizona State University and the author of The Physics of Star Trek (1995).

censuring of individuals’ ability to publish false and defamatory material that causes damage to reputation. To stifle scientific debate would clearly be wrong. Each year tens of thousands of patients benefit from chiropractic. Its safety record is equal or superior to that of other regulated health professions and there have been no known deaths from chiropractic in the UK. Patient satisfaction is consistently high and we are committed to delivering ever enhanced standards of care. ■ Richard Brown is a chiropractor and vice-president of the BCA

Commentary Richard Wiseman Tweeting my way to a scientific breakthrough LAST week I conducted the first scientific study to be carried out using the instant-messaging service Twitter, continuing a long tradition of using new communications technology to conduct mass-participation experiments. The experiment examined remote viewing – the alleged psychic ability to “see” distant locations. From the 1970s to the 1990s, the US government spent millions of dollars researching this phenomenon, and some have claimed that the results supported its existence. I am deeply sceptical about paranormal abilities, but Twitter provided a great opportunity to conduct a large-scale public remote-viewing study. I sent out a message on Twitter announcing the study. Over 7000 people signed up. The first trial was an informal affair, and involved me travelling to a secret location and then sending out a “tweet” asking participants to tweet back their thoughts, feelings, impressions and images concerning my location. In response people described grassy hills, concrete car parks and odd-shaped sculptures. Twenty minutes later, I sent a second tweet containing the address of a website that allowed everyone to view a photograph of the location (a weir). I also asked the participants to rate both their belief in the paranormal and the degree to which their thoughts matched the target. More

“Those who believe in the paranormal are good at finding illusory correspondences” than 1000 people participated, with paranormal believers claiming high levels of correspondence between their thoughts and the actual location. The formal part of the study, which took place over four days, tested both whether the group as a whole was psychic and whether believers outperformed disbelievers. On each day I travelled to a randomly selected location and asked everyone to send tweets describing their thoughts and impressions about the location. In the judging phase, participants were presented with five photographs, one showing the location and four decoys, and asked to select the target. The photograph that received the

PROFILE Richard Wiseman is professor of the public understanding of psychology at the University of Hertfordshire in Hatfield, UK. More than a million people have taken part in his mass-participation experiments

most votes was taken as the group’s decision. If the group were psychic, the majority would vote for the correct target. In the first trial I was looking up at a striking, modern-looking building. Unfortunately, the group voted for some woods. On trial two I was sitting in the middle of a playground, but the group thought I was standing at the foot of a long stairway. The third trial found me under an unusual-looking canopy; the group voted for a graveyard. On the final trial I stared intently at a red postbox. The group believed that I was standing at the side of a canal. In short, all four trials were misses. When I analysed believers and sceptics separately, the results were the same, with no difference between the groups. So what did we learn? Well, the study didn’t support the existence of remote viewing and suggests that those who believe in the paranormal are simply good at finding illusory correspondences between their thoughts and a target – which is, maybe, why they believe in the first place. No surprises there. So perhaps the most important outcome was to demonstrate that thousands of people are happy to take part in an instant Twitter study. Now it is up to scientists to find other interesting ways of harnessing this new research tool.

13 June 2009 | NewScientist | 23

ALAN BURLES

out that we urgently need to exploit science and technology to meet them. Will we have the wisdom to move towards a future where all of humanity has a common goal? Will we as a species finally discard the silly religious myths that separate groups and get in the way of an honest and realistic assessment of the world around us, so that we can address real problems with real solutions? Star Trek does not present a world free of conflict, emotion, jealousy, love or hatred. The essential tension between the chief protagonists, Captain Kirk and Mr Spock, over what is logical versus what is right forms a key dialectic, but the show ultimately presents a world in which human emotions and reason can peacefully coexist. It remains to be seen whether science and reason can help guide humanity to a better and more peaceful future, but I think this belief is part of what keeps the Star Trek franchise going. I can only hope that it is not as unrealistic as falling into a black hole and coming out in one piece. ■