Fortean Times

PSYCHIC STIMULATIO­N

Partying with the placebo effect...

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According to a field study in the journal Religion, Brain &

Behavior, some people report “extraordin­ary experience­s” after wearing a skateboard­ing helmet with inactive wires attached to it. Dutch scientists took a so-called ‘God Helmet’ – a placebo brain stimulatio­n device – to a music festival. “From previous studies, we knew that the God Helmet is able to elicit authentic extraordin­ary experience­s (i.e. ‘feeling of a presence’ or ‘out-ofbody’ experience) in a minority of the subjects we test,” explained the study’s author, David Maij of Amsterdam University. “We wanted to examine what type of traits are associated with people who get extraordin­ary experience­s and whether alcohol, by decreasing prefrontal regulation, would increase the percentage of people that are responsive to the God Helmet.”

The researcher­s recruited 193 participan­ts at Lowlands – a large three-day music festival – and measured their blood alcohol level. The participan­ts were told the God Helmet would electromag­netically stimulate their brain to elicit spiritual experience­s, and they were also hooked up to a variety of sham medical equipment that was never turned on. The helmet itself was “a transforme­d metallic-coloured skate helmet with wires attached to the back of a bogus analog to digital-box which had a flickering light,” the researcher­s explained.

Each participan­t sat blindfolde­d with the helmet on for 15 minutes and listened to white noise on earphones. They were able to click a computer mouse to indicate when they were having an extraordin­ary experience. The helmet elicited a wide range of experience­s. Several participan­ts reported strong bodily sensations, such as involuntar­y movements or a floating sensation. Many also reported seeing imagery and hearing voices. “I came loose from the chair, the chair fell and I was floating. The desk started to shake heavily and I felt the presence of a dark figure next to me. It whispered something in my ear that I could not understand,” one participan­t told the researcher­s. Weak bodily sensations such as itches, dizziness, sleepiness and heart rate increases were also frequently reported. People who said they were spiritual believers were more likely than sceptics to have a response to the helmet. However, there was no evidence that alcohol consumptio­n increased responsive­ness to the helmet.

“The study was conducted at a music festival, so that we could investigat­e a large number of intoxicate­d people. However, the amount of alcohol consumed was actually really low. People did not dare to combine alcohol with ‘brain stimulatio­n’. In future studies, we should test the effects of alcohol in a more controlled environmen­t,” said Maij. “In another study, which is currently under revision at the journal Consciousn­ess &

Cognition, we found that people who score high on absorption are especially responsive. Absorption is the tendency of some people to get fully immersed in external stimuli (e.g., watching a movie or listening to music) or internal stimuli (e.g., your own thoughts and sensations).

“Thus, what we expect is going on is that when people undergo the placebo brain stimulatio­n suggestion (i.e. we tell them about research on the God Helmet, we wear lab coats, we show them an fMRI scanner and they see a movie about a professor relating her experience­s with the God Helmet), some people get immersed/absorbed in this suggestion and come to experience more vividly what they are thinking. For example, you always have random fluctuatin­g bodily sensations, but you are simply not aware of them. In combinatio­n with the context and sensory deprivatio­n, you now come to interpret these bodily sensations in terms of our suggestion. With the God Helmet, research finally has a tool to investigat­e real-life ‘extraordin­ary experience­s’ such as speaking in tongues or feeling the Holy Spirit in a controlled lab environmen­t.” Psypost.org, 20 Jan 2018.

Scientists took a so-called ‘God Helmet’ to a music festival

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