CEREBRAL LOCALIZATION AND THE PSI SYNDROME

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CIA-RDP96-00787R000200080049-1
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RIFPUB
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U
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6
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November 4, 2016
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November 5, 1998
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49
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Publication Date: 
January 1, 1975
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MAGAZINE
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THE J,tHNAL Ott NY, H' ~~ ~~jtpl}+~ ~. r Release 2001/03/26 : C IA-RDkgt' -0?t8~1R0 0,;0080049-1 Copyright ?19751W Ihe"tSKI '\iilltS- IMF I CEREBRAL LOCALIZATION AND TILE PSI' SYNDROME, JAN EIIRENWALD, M.1),' On trying to correlate the psi syndrome with a neural substrate, it is necessary to distinguish between spontaneous, "macropsychologicar, and experimental, "micropsychological" incidents of the card-calling type. On comparing telepathic drawings with drawings made by brain-injured patients suffering from optical agnosia, the identical tendency to distortion and disorganization of the target materials can be discerned. It suggests that the telepathic subject is "agnostic' in relation to psi impressions, and that his central processing takes place in the right rather than the left hemisphere.'T'he capricious nature of extrasensory perception (FSP) responses of the card-cal- ling type points to fluctuations in the reticular and limbic midbrain system in warding off' tile intrusion into awareness of subliminal o.r irrelevant percep- t inns from the outside world. Among the reasons for the slow, uphill struggle of parapsychology for recognition by the scientific community are the built-in preconceptions with which many parapsy- chologists have approached their subject matter. Psi phenomena, by contrast to the ordinary, run-of',the-mill sensory-motor transactions studied by the neurophysSolo- gist, were supposed to he of a basically nonphysical, spiritual nature. They were described in such negative terms as ESP or .extra"-sensory perception; as Pit, or psy- chokinesis-that is, as a miraculously ef- fective motor impulse without the aid of a detectable effector organ. Such preconceived ideas contributed their share to the scientific ostracism of Be phenomena and their relegation into the sphere of the supernatural. Even today math behavioral scientists are inclined to brush aside experimental ESP or Pit data as statistical artifacts, or frankly errone- ous, fraudulent findings, or outright delu- sional claims. On the other hand, the last thing ptu apsyc hologists were prepared to do was to give serious consideration to their correlations and apparent similarities to psychiatric or neuropathological condi- tions. 't'his precisely is the purpose 01' the present paper. I propose to review, first, a few early experiments with telepathic drawings carried out by the French para- psychologist. Rene Warcollier (19), and by Mr. and Mrs. Upton Sinclair (16) in this country. This will he followed by a brief discussion of the ilroblerns posed by the statistical ESP experiments of-the card- calling type developed by Rhine and his associates (15). 13ut instead of pointing to the few "striking" cases obtained in-such tests-, I will call attention to the apparent failures or "clear nlisses" scored by the respective telepathic percipients. Figure 1 illustrate; the telepathic draw- ings of one of Warcollier's experimental subjects. It shows the distortion and disor- ganization of the target picture, a dirWib(e which the subject faded to recognize, hl- stead, he sketched part of its oval shape, caught the impression of the propeller, repeated the motif twice, and placed one correctly at the lower part of the picture-. E.xperinlents'wilh telepathic drawings car- ried rout. by Upton Sinclair and his wife (Figure 2) show the same tendency to distortion and disorganization of the target pictures. The same is true for more recent experiments with dream telepathy carried out by Ullman and 1Krippner and their Consulting Psychiatrist, The Roosevelt Hospital, associates (18), using verbal descriptions or New Yt,rk City. Send reprint request:: to Ii East 08th Street, New drawings of telepathic target pictures York, New York 10(121. made by their subjects. tt) t Approved For Release 2001/03/26 : CIA-RDP96-00787R00020 394 Approved For Releas . O U03/26: CIA-RDP96-00787ROW2c0b80049-1 I MPR1=551 ON wound in it It r Iel't pa rieto-occipit al region. T11e bullet had been removed by surger} but the patient was left with marked dam- age to both his personality and intellectual func(ions. Ills speech was halting; at times he was at a loss to find the names of objects or persons; he showed evidence of amnest is aphasia. Ills handwriting was unpaired, showing slight agritpluc disturbances. Ile was unable to perform the simplest calcu- lations; he lost his way in the hospital ward, and he was eonl'used about spatial relations. fie showed the same confusion of up and down, right and left in space. Figure,3 is a sample of his drawings which he verbally described as follows: a) a French window in the hospital ward: h) a face ('tt face; c) a window latch; (1) a ship;, e) a tree, drawn upside down, with the runt nor rf Stf }~* A~S:._ Fin. 1. Top. An airship, drawn by the agent. Bottom. 't'elepathic impression. Note the correct rendering of an oval ::hope. The propeller nu>tit' appears twice. The scribble above the rival is unex- plained. (From V 'arcullier, H. Mind to Mind. 1918. Reprinted by permission.) Critics have found fault with the imper- fect match of targets and telepathic im- pressions in experiments of this order and are inclined altogether to reject the tele- pathic interpretation on these grounds. Parapsychologists, on the other hand, were quick to apologize fo'r the poor showing of their subjects and pointed ttrthe occasional "perfect hits obtained to bolster their case. I submit that these much vaunted per- fect hits are in effect atypical and mislead- ing, and that the imperfect cases or near misses are far more significant for our understanding of the psi syndrome. Figure 3 shows the drawings produced by a brain- injured patient of mine seen many years ago in the neuropsychialric clinic of the University of Vienna (4). The patient was admitted to the hospital following a suici- dal attempt with a penetrating gunshot Fin. 2. Top. Face, nic iii to represent a jack-o'-lan? tern, drawn by agent, ltottnrn."I'clepathic inipre~sion. A morn sickle v, ih''vier," rewinhliu? nose in the target drawing. Note (loot an e,?c Idruinti and in- scrihed upside clnwvn) was added by the recipient as an afterthought. IFFrom Sinclair. If. Mental Radio, p. 69, 196'2.) Approved For Release 2001/03/26 CIA-RDP96-00787R0002090 Approved For RfIpga lgt~001/03/26 : CIA-RDP96-007?,,R000200080049-1 i b Fin. ;i. Drawings of the Vienna patient. a) a French window; h) a face, en /ace; c) the window latch; d) a ship; e) a tree drawn upside down, with a) the root; h) the trunk; c) the crown, (From Ehrenwald, J. p. 535. 19:11.1 at the top, the crown at the bottom and the trunk in the middle. Ilcre, again, the most striking; feature is the utter disorganization of the material. It seems to he broken into pieces, jumbled like meat passed through a chopping ma- chine. In short, displacement inversion and gross deviations from the horizontal and the vertical were characteristic features of his spatial orientation and motor behavior in space. My teacher, Professor Otto Poetzl (1:3), Poetzl and Hoff, and many others, have published it number of'similar observations. They all point to lesions in the left parieto-occipital region, sometimes extending to the corpus callosum and to the right hemisphere. More recently, Professor A. R. Luria (9) of'the University of Moscow has published a series of similar observatunas in patients suffering from optic agnosia. Figure .1 illus- trates samples of their drawings. 'l'lae pic- ture on the left represents the patient's jumbled impressions of an elephant. On the right can be seen equally disorganized impressions of a camel. It should he noted that the drawings of these brain-injured patients exhibitinuch the same distortion and Spatiotenrporal disorganization as the samples of telepathic drawings produced ,by normal sub jects. It .is also int cresting to note that' such patients,.in addition, to the impairment of' their drawing ability. also tend to confuse the nteaning"of a-given object or picture. Thb? .c