articleJournal of Personality and Social PsychologyJan 1, 2011Closed access

Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect.

DJDaryl J. Bem

Cornell University

PubMed
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Abstract

The term psi denotes anomalous processes of information or energy transfer that are currently unexplained in terms of known physical or biological mechanisms. Two variants of psi are precognition (conscious cognitive awareness) and premonition (affective apprehension) of a future event that could not otherwise be anticipated through any known inferential process. Precognition and premonition are themselves special cases of a more general phenomenon: the anomalous retroactive influence of some future event on an individual's current responses, whether those responses are conscious or nonconscious, cognitive or affective. This article reports 9 experiments, involving more than 1,000 participants, that test for…

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Authors

1
  • DJ
    Daryl J. BemCorresponding

    Cornell University

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Psychology
  • Cognition
  • Recall
  • Stimulus (psychology)
  • Feeling
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Habituation
  • Developmental psychology
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