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On this site, you will find a list of books and magazines about UFOs and related subjects that are part of my collection.

For each book and magazine, publication details and cover images are provided. For many books and magazines, the table of contents is also included. If a digital version of the publication exists, a link to download it is provided. (Digital versions are NOT downloadable from the site).

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Last update 2025-2-12

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William A. TILLER, A Gas Discharge Device for Investigating Focussed Human Attention pp.255-271
Journal of Scientific Exploration
Volume 4 Number 2 1990
Name: Tiller, William A.
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Letters to the Editor: Comments on A Gas Discharge Device for Investigating Focussed Human Attention pp.263-164
Journal of Scientific Exploration
Volume 5 Number 2 1991
Name: Tiller, William A. ; Korn, Stanley
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William A. TILLER, Invited Essay: What Are Subtle Energies? pp.293-304
Journal of Scientific Exploration
Volume 7 Number 3 1993
Name: Tiller, William A.
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Image not available Journal of Scientific Exploration

Volume 4 Number 2 1990

Editor: Bernhard M. HAISCH
Name: Tiller, William A.
CONTENTS
AuthorTitlePag

Invited Essay
Michael D. SWORDSUsing the Study of Anomalies to Enhance Critical Thinking in the Classroom 123-136
Abstract: n upper-class college seminar-style course for general science credit is described. The primary function of the offering is to elicit higher cognitive thought from the students (analysis, synthesis, evaluation). The student experience from this course indicates not only that they had much to learn as regard to the state of evidence for many of the anomalies (from Psi to UFOs to Cryptozoology to Reincarnation), but that researchers and the "science establishment" are all demonstrating flaws and failures in their approaches to these subjects.

Marsha HANCOCK ADAMSSome Observations of Electromagnetic Signals Prior to California Earthquakes 137-152
Abstract: Electromagnetic (EM) signals in the frequency range below 1,000 Hz have been monitored since 198 1 for the purpose of earthquake forecasting. Signal strength increased more than 7 standard deviations above the mean prior to 3 major California Earthquakes; Coalinga (1983), Whittier Narrows ( 1987), and Lorna Prieta ( 1989). The signal increases occurred 10 days to one month prior to the earthquakes. They were continuously elevated until after each earthquake occurred. An effort to forecast time and location of smaller earthquakes in the magnitude 2-4 range is underway. Expert system software has been developed to interpret the EM signals in near real time. The expert system makes forecasts on a daily basis for selected areas in California. A preliminary statistical analysis of recent forecasts appears promising, yielding probabilities of p 1 * or better. On August 7, 1990 another series of strong signals began. They have continued for an unprecedented length of time and are still present at the time of submission of this paper on October 16, 1990.

William H. JEFFERYSBayesian Analysis of Random Event Generator Data 153-169
Related:
Journal of Scientific Exploration Volume 8 Number 2 /1994 - Erratum: Bayesian Analysis of Random Event Generator Data [Jefferys, William H.]
Abstract: Data from experiments that use random event generators are usually analyzed by classical (frequentist) statistical tests, which summarize the statistical significance of the test statistic as a p-value. However, classical statistical tests are frequently inappropriate to these data, and the resulting p-values can grossly overestimate the significance of the result. Bayesian analysis shows that a small p-value may not provide credible evidence that an anomalous phenomenon exists. An easily applied alternative methodology is described and applied to an example from the literature.

Antonia MILLSMoslem Cases of the Reincarnation Type in Northern India: A Test of the Hypothesis of Imposed Identification Part I: Analysis of 26 Cases171-188
Abstract: The author describes the features of 26 Moslem (or half-Moslem) cases of the reincarnation type in India. In eight of these cases a Moslem child is said to have recalled the life of a Moslem. In seven cases a Moslem child is said to have recalled a life as a Hindu, and in 11 cases a Hindu child is said to have recalled the life of a Moslem (these are referred to as half-Moslem cases). Most Moslems in India do not officially endorse the concept of human earthly reincarnation. In some instances the absence of the doctrine in Islam made Moslems hostile to investigation of the cases. However, the cases are generally very similar to the more common Hindu cases, except that in solved Moslem and half-Moslem cases a higher proportion of previous personalities died violently, and the subjects in the halfMoslem cases showed behavior and (in two instances) birthmarks appropriate for the other religious community. Both Hindu and Moslem parents found it troubling to have a child recall a past life in a different religion. Such cases are unlikely to be the result of subtle clues given the child to adopt an envied identity.
Antonia MILLSMoslem Cases of the Reincarnation Type in Northern India: A Test of the Hypothesis of Imposed Identification Part II: Reports of Three Cases189-202
Abstract: The author describes three cases of the reincarnation type in India in which either the subject or the previous personality (or both) were Moslem. In one case both the child and the person she was said to be were Moslem. In the second case, a Hindu child claimed to be a Moslem. The third case not only remains unsolved (that is, no one was ever found who corresponded to the child's statements), but probably represents a spurious case. In this case or non-case, a Moslem child gave some indication of recalling being a Hindu Brahmin. Moslems do not endorse the concept of reincarnation and, therefore, approach cases skeptically. The cases are presented in some detail so the readers can assess for themselves to what extent the cases represent evidence that something paranormal by Western standards (such as reincarnation) may be taking place.

Michel PARROTElectromagnetic Disturbances Associated With Earthquakes: An Analysis of Ground-Based and Satellite Data 203-211
Abstract: Several observations were made of Very Low Frequency (VLF) emissions apparently associated with earthquakes, which were recorded independently at ground-based stations and on satellites. The observations at the Kerguelen station (49"26'S, 70°25'E) were made using magnetic antennae, on April 24 and 25, 1980, during a period when three earthquakes with magnitude Ms > 4.7 took place near the station. Several increases of electromagnetic waves at the time of earthquakes were recorded on the polar-orbiting satellite AUREOL-3. The observations on the geostationary GEOS-2 satellite were made using magnetic and electric antennae during the period 1977- 198 1. Data were analysed for those cases when both intense (M, > 5) earthquakes occurred in the region close to the satellite longitude and the satellite was operating in the VLF mode. A statistical analysis, based on the enhancement of wave intensity at the time of earthquakes and using GEOS2 data, seems to indicate that there is a (possibly indirect) association between seismic activity and some of the VLF emissions observed at the satellite. Ionospheric measurements made from the ground also showed an increase of the critical frequencyfoE, of the sporadic layer Es when earthquakes occurred nearby. Some aspects of the relation between the VLF emissions and the seismic activity are discussed.

C. M. PLEASS, N. Dean DEYConditions That Appear to Favor Extrasensory Interactions Between Homo Sapiens and Microbes 213-231
Abstract: We report laser Doppler studies of the possibility of extrasensory interactions between Homo sapiens and isolated unicellular microbes, and unattended computer-controlled studies of the response of cultures of microbes to the distant sacrifice of clones. From the first series of experiments we find evidence that the focussed attention and intention of a person in nominal physical isolation from a culture of Dunaliella tertiolecta can influence their activity. Averaging of all data from a total of 25 1 trials strongly suggested the rejection of the null hypothesis. However, a subset of 1 18 formal trials conducted with more restrictive protocols were only marginally significant. A second series of experiments used the sacrifice of clones as a distant stimulus. The data appear to show that the marine alga Tetraselrnis suecica reacts dramatically to the sacrifice of cells in a physically isolated aliquot of the same culture if the experimenters are aware of the moment of sacrifice, and excited by the novelty of the experiment. In sharp contrast, only marginally significant results were obtained when the same experiment was run entirely automatically, with the time of the sacrifice defined by random number selection, and the experiment activated by computer command in an empty laboratory. A third series appears to illustrate a difference between the effect of the attention of experimenters and participants in a formal series, and the more highly developed states of excitement and interest which normally characterize pilot trials. In conclusion, we draw attention to the support which our observations provide for an "experimenter effect." Our present working hypothesis is that the result of any experiment is a form of environmental feedback, a complex manifestation of the conscious and subconscious expectations of the experimenter and the participants.

Helmut SCHMIDTCorrelation Between Mental Processes and External Random Events 233-241
Abstract: The report reviews the author's early work on the precognition of quantum processes, including changes introduced as safeguards against errors

Ian STEVENSONPhobias in Children Who Claim to Remember Previous Lives 243-254
Abstract: In a series of 387 children who claimed to remember a previous life phobias occurred in 14 1 (36%). The phobias nearly always corresponded to the mode of death in the life of the deceased person the child claimed to remember. They usually manifested between the ages of 2 and 5, and sometimes the child showed the phobia in early infancy before it had begun to speak about a previous life. The phobias did not derive from imitating another member of the family or from any postnatal traumatic experience. They seem to require some paranormal explanation of which, however, reincarnation is only one.

William A. TILLERA Gas Discharge Device for Investigating Focussed Human Attention 255-271
Related:
Journal of Scientific Exploration Volume 5 Number 2 /1991 - Comments on A Gas Discharge Device for Investigating Focussed Human Attention
Abstract: A gas discharge cell with dielectric-coated electrodes and -- 1 mm gap was operated at voltages -- several percent below breakdown for the purpose of measuring an effect of focussed human attention on electron microavalanche size in the gas. An enhanced counting rate of supercritical size microavalanches was observed under a well-defined protocol when focussed human attention was active. It was found that humans can either enhance the microavalanche number and size or leave the system unchanged depending upon their mental focus. Here, the device design as well as the effects of various gases, dielectrics, shielding, etc., are discussed.

James W. WARWICKRadio Emissions From an Earthquake 273-279
Abstract: -Earlier we associated radio emission preceeding the great Chilean earthquake of 1960 with the quake by virtue of the emission region's size (if its source were the subsequently observed rupture zone) and the required direction of arrival at the observation station in Boulder, Colorado. Through analysis of the power relations between the emission in total power and signal levels in the interferometer, which failed to observe the emission in phase power, it is possible to deduce the least source size, under the plausible assumption that the emissions propagated nearly horizontally. This size is 3.1 degrees; the next larger possible solution for sources at this azimuthal range is 6.2 degrees. For signals arriving from the azimuth of the center of the rupture zone as seen from Boulder, the least source size is 3.47 degrees; a solution of 6.94 degrees is also possible. The total span of the rupture zone in azimuth was 3.5 plus or minus 0.2 degrees. The agreement with the least source size for the azimuth of the rupture zone is excellent and is further evidence for the reality of the association

Letters to the Editor
Comments on Remote Viewing and Computer Communications-An Experiment281
Related:
Journal of Scientific Exploration Volume 2 Number 1 /1988 - Remote Viewing and Computer Communications-An Experiment [Vallée, Jacques]
Comments on Vallee's Five Arguments Against the Extraterrestrial Origin of Unidentified Flying Objects282-284
Related:
Journal of Scientific Exploration Volume 4 Number 1 /1990 - Five Arguments Against the Extraterrestrial Origin of Unidentified Flying Objects [Vallée, Jacques F.]


Image not available Journal of Scientific Exploration

Volume 5 Number 2 1991

Editor: Bernhard M. HAISCH
Name: Tiller, William A.; Korn, Stanley
CONTENTS
AuthorTitlePag

Bernhard HAISCHEditor's Note i

William GIROLDINIEccles's Model of Mind-Brain Interaction and Psychokinesis: A Preliminary Study 145-161
Abstract: In this article the relationship between mind and brain is initially discussed from the opposite materialist and dualist perspectives. In the Eccles's hypothesis, a very weak psychokinetic (PK) action of will on a few neurons of cerebral cortex could determine remarkable changes in brain activity. Starting from this idea, a neuron network suitable for revealing weak PK influences is discussed. Thirty-five preliminary PK experiments based on a Random Signal Generator (RSG), which represents a first raw electronic version of this neuron network, were performed. Twenty-seven subjects attempted to mentally influence the RSG in a double optical and acoustic RSG-feedback. Each experiment was fully computer controlled and consisted of ten PK-minutes alternated with ten control-minutes without feedback. Moreover, the EEG recording of alpha and beta rhythms of subjects during the experiments was performed. The PK experiments gave altogether a significant result (p < lo-'), whereas 35 control-experiments without subjects were nonsignificant. EEG analysis showed that during the control-minutes the alpha and beta rhythms were wider than in the PK minutes, and moreover the alpha rhythm was remarkably higher during the PK-hitting than in the PK-missing trials. A psychological interpretation of these results is proposed, but the more interesting possibility is that an independent high alpha activity would cause better PK performance. Further studies are necessary to test this important possibility.

A. I. GRIGOR'EV, I. D. GRIGOR'EVA, S. O. SHIRYAEVABall Lightning and St. Elmo's Fire as Forms of Thunderstorm Activity 163-190
Abstract: The electrohydrodynamic theory of ball lightning and St. Elmo's fire is developed. Electrohydrodynamic instability of water droplets and films is basic for these phenomena and distinguishes them from corona.

James McCLENONSocial Scientific Paradigms for Investigating Anomalous Experience 191-203
Abstract: The investigation of anomalous experience may be conducted within the realm of folklore, collective behavior, and the sociology of religion. Although these social scientific approaches lack the mathematical precision of the physical sciences, they allow theoretical development, the testing of hypotheses derived from these orientations, and the revision of theory in light of empirical observation. The use of social scientific paradigms grants the investigation of anomalous phenomena a cumulative quality, open to both skeptics and believers.

Robert G. JAHN, York H. DOBYNS, Brenda J. DUNNECount Population Profiles in Engineering Anomalies Experiments 205-232
Abstract: Four technically and conceptually distinct experiments-a random binary generator driven by a microelectronic noise diode; a deterministic pseudorandom generator; a large-scale random mechanical cascade; and a digitized remote perception protocol-display strikingly similar patterns of count deviations from their corresponding chance distributions. Specifically, each conforms to a statistical linear regression of the form An / n = 6 (x - p) , where An / n is the deviation from chance expectation of the population frequency of the score value x divided by its chance frequency, p is the mean of the chance distribution, and 6 is the slope of the regression line, constant for a given data subset, but parametrically dependent on the experimental device, the particular operator or data concatenation, and the prevailing secondary conditions. In each case, the result is tantamount to a simple marginal transposition of the appropriate chance Gaussian distribution to a new mean value p' = p + Nt, where N is the sample size, or equivalently to a change in the elemental probability of the basic binary process to p' = p + 6, where p is the chance value and E = 614. Proposition of a common psychophysical mechanism by which the consciousness of the operator may achieve these elemental probability shifts is thwarted by the complexity and disparity of the several technical and logical tasks that would be involved. More parsimonious, albeit more radical, explication may be posed via a holistic information-theoretic approach, wherein the consciousness adds some increment of information, in the technical sense, into the particular experimental system, which then deploys it in the most efficient fashion to achieve the experimental goal, i.e., the volition-correlated mean shift. The relationship of this technical information transfer to the subjective teleological processes of the consciousness remains to be understood.

Erlendur HARALDSSONChildren Claiming Past-Life Memories: Four Cases in Sri Lanka 233-261
Abstract: This is a report on an investigation of four children in Sri Lanka who claimed to remember a previous life at the early age of two to three years. Detailed written records were made of the statements of three of the children before any attempt was made to examine their claims. In two cases, these statements made it possible to trace a deceased person whose life history fit to a considerable extent the statements made by the child. In these cases, no prior connection of any kind was found to have existed between the child's family and that of the alleged previous personality. The pattern of these cases resembles those earlier reported by Stevenson: the children are at a preschool age when they start to make claims about a previous life; they usually start to "forget'' at about the time they go to school; some of them claim to have died violently earlier; they express the wish to meet their earlier families or visit their homes; and some of them show behavioral idiosyncrasies that seem to differ from what they observe and would be expected to learn from their environment. In Sri Lanka more than half of such cases remain "unsolved," i.e., no person can be traced that roughly matches the child's statements.

Letters to the Editor
Comments on A Gas Discharge Device for Investigating Focussed Human Attention263-164
Related:
Journal of Scientific Exploration Volume 4 Number 2 /1990 - A Gas Discharge Device for Investigating Focussed Human Attention [Tiller, William A.]


Image not available Journal of Scientific Exploration

Volume 7 Number 3 1993
Name: Tiller, William A.
CONTENTS
AuthorTitlePag

Research and Review Articles
Michael SCHROTER-KUNHARDTA Review of Near Death Experiences219-239
Abstract: Near death experiences (NDEs) have been reported throughout time in essentially all cultures. The contents of modem NDEs is independent of gender, age, and profession. The frequency of occurrence is estimated to lie between 10 and 50 percent of all near-death situations. This frequency could be higher still, perhaps even 100 percent, were it not for the dreamlike and dissociative character of the experience and the amnesia-prone participation of the temporal lobe causing a clear tendency to forget the NDE. A number of similar elements are common to NDEs, such as an out-of-body experience (OBE) in which the physical body and its surroundings are observed from various external vantage points, often from above. Numerous cases exist in which the reality of the OBE-observation can be independently 'verified, by external conditions, situations, people, objects, etc. Even previously non-religious ND experiencers subsequently show a markedly decreased fear of death and a corresponding increase in belief in life after death. Certain elements of NDE-like experiences can be induced by, for example, electrical stimulation of the right temporal lobe or the use of hallucinogenic substances. It is possible that hallucinogenic transmitters (and endorphins) of the brain itself play a role in the NDE. Nevertheless, there are NDE-elements, such as the frequently reported life-review and certainly the acquisition of external, verifiable information concerning the physical surroundings during the experience, that cannot be explained by physiological causes. Wish-fulfillment, death-denial or other defense mechanisms of the brain are also not adequate explanations. The large body of NDE data now accumulated point to genuine evidence for a non-physical reality and paranormal capacities of the human being.
Bruce MACCABEEAnalysis and Discussion of the May 18, 1992 UFO Sighting in Gulf Breeze, Florida 241-257
Abstract: A professional TV crew traveled to Gulf Breeze, Florida on two occasions in the spring of 1992 at a time when sightings were occurring on a weekly basis. On each occasion anomalous lights were observed and videotaped passing through the Gulf Breeze skies. This paper reports briefly on the first sighting and concentrates on the analysis of the second sighting when the TV crew used a special "high power" camera. During the second sighting the lights were observed from two locations allowing for triangulation and a subsequent estimate of the spacing between them (about 10 ft). They were moving in an early rectilinear path at a speed exceeding 20 mph before they faded out. A discussion of the hoax hypothesis involving pyrotechnic devices and incandescent light sources is presented. It is shown that the sightings, if not of "real" UFOs, constitute a hoax of considerable ingenuity, expense and persistence. This sighting was just one of about 170 which have occurred in the Gulf Breeze area during 1990-1992.
York H. DOBYNSSelection Versus Influence in Remote REG Anomalies 259-269
Abstract: A large body of remote human-machine interaction data has been collected in a protocol structurally similar to that used for experiments in remote perception, with somewhat comparable anomalous results. This suggests that the effects seen in the former could be attributable to a selection or sorting process on a reservoir of unperturbed data, rather than to any remote influence on the machine behavior per se. Fortunately, the statistical consequences of these two modalities are clearly distinguishable within the available empirical data. When properly evaluated by Bayesian hypothesis-comparison methods, the experimental results overwhelmingly favor the direct influence hypothesis over any selection mechanism.
J. W. NIENHUYSDutch Investigations of the Gauquelin Mars Effect 271-281
Abstract: A team of Dutch skeptics have investigated a new explanation for the Mars effect with sports champions of Michel Gauquelin. They conjectured that outstanding sports people might have diurnal and seasonal birth rhythms different from average people and that moreover the short time base of Gauquelin's observations might further enhance these effects. Essentially their findings were negative. Simulations were either not possible because of lack of data or they showed that along these lines an explanation is only possible if very implausible additional assumptions are made. However, it is argued that the Gauquelin data suffer from a bias, namely some artifact of the exploratory phase. The eminence effect of Ertel is shown to be too weak to draw firm conclusions about its existence. It seems plausible that the Gauquelins did not realize that said artifact had to be tightly controlled for

Suitbert ERTELComments on Dutch Investigations of the Gauquelin Mars Effect 283-292
Abstract: -The first of two Dutch skeptics' attempts at disproving the Mars effect failed (Nienhuys 1993a). Contrary to the Nienhuys view, however, the second pass of the Dutch critics at the Gauquelin claim- an attempt at undermining the validity of his data base- is shown to fail as well. The critics drew apparent support from my previous unearthing of a Gauquelin biasGauquelin had exempted cases from publication (Ertel, 1988). Yet they neglected the fact that any such bias had been neutralized as a result of my pooling of published and unpublished data. Specifically, a significant eminence trend was demonstrated in the unmanufactured total sample in my 1988 report. In addition, Dutch endeavours at rendering the eminence relationship insignificant either failed (even a less sensitive scale with 12 instead of 36 sector division yielded significance) or were illegitimate (splitting up of the entire sample for that purpose violates methodological logic). Thus, the present (fourth) attempt in the history of resistance against the Gauquelin challenge by organized skeptics has added two misses to their record.

Invited Essay
William A. TILLERWhat Are Subtle Energies? 293-304
Abstract: A brief discussion is given of a set of anomalous experimental phenomena that are inexplicable based only on the four accepted forces operating in the physical universe. Possible explanations require defining the existence of subtle energies. Using a quantum mechanical description, the seat of subtle energy functioning is traced to the vacuum state with magnetic vector potential assuming the role of bridge between the subtle energies and physical energies. A brief discussion is given of how we might reliably detect subtle energies and a zeroth order model of the subtle domains as substructure for the vacuum state is given.

Columns
Topher COOPERAnomalous Propagation305-310
Michael EPSTEINThe Skeptical Perspective311-315
j. DOMMANGETGuest Column: The Comite PARA-European Skeptics Committee317-321

Letters to the Editor
Ukraine Research Institute on Anomalous Phenomena323-325
Comments on Guide to UFO Research325-326
Related:
Journal of Scientific Exploration Volume 7 Number 1 Spring/1993 - A Guide to UFO Research [Swords, Michael D.]

Book Reviews
Ian STEVENSONBeyond Natural Selection by Robert Wesson327-328
Peter A. STURROCKFirst Review of Forbidden Science328-330
Review: Jacques VALLÉE,FORBIDDEN SCIENCE - 1992
Keith THOMPSONSecond Review of Forbidden Science330-333
Review: Jacques VALLÉE,FORBIDDEN SCIENCE - 1992
Hilary EVANSRoads to Center Place: A Cultural Atlas of Chaco Canyon and the Anasazi by Kathryn Gabriel333-335

SSE News Items
Preliminary Announcement of 1994 SSE Meetings336
Abstracts of 1993 SSE Meeting336