The Ganzfeld Procedure - Hallucinating

SilosighbinSilosighbin Regular
edited August 2010 in Life
Does anybody have any experiences in trying this?



I have personally tried it one time myself and was amazed with the result - I hallucinated. I'm just astounded at the power of the human brain. I don't believe in ESP and all that but obviously using sensory deprivation produces some remarkable phenomena.




What I did was make myself a simple mask that covered my eyes (The likes you are sometime given on planes to sleep) out of plain white paper, so that I could still see some light through it, but it was just whiteness. Then made sure I was in a quiet environment and listened to some binaural frequencies. I just sat there. Nothingness overrode me. After some time of nothingness I began seeing odd shadow like things, as if people were walking around in my room and in front of me in my field of vision, through the lit paper. I'll mention that I was the only one in my small bedroom. To be honest I didn't think much of the process before trying it, chalking its apparent experiences up to some kind of placebo effect. But I honestly think there's more to it now. So after seeing these shadows walking around I couldn't help but taking my mask off to see if anything was there....nothing. But whenever I put the mask back on, those shadows kept coming back. It was freaking me the fuck out tbh.



I suggest people interested in this kind of brain phenomena check it out and try the procedure out. I'll be trying it more to see if I can get more detailed hallucinations like those I've read about (See below quotes for another experience).




For those that have no idea what I'm talking about:
The ganzfeld procedure is a mild sensory isolation technique that was first introduced into experimental psychology during the 1930s and subsequently adapted by parapsychologists to test for the existence of psi--anomalous processes of information or energy transfer such as telepathy or other forms of extrasensory perception that are currently unexplained in terms of known physical or biological mechanisms. Parapsychologists developed the ganzfeld procedure, in part, because they had become dissatisfied the card-guessing methods for testing ESP pioneered by J. B. Rhine at Duke University in the 1930s. In particular, they believed that the repetitive forced-choice procedure in which a participant repeatedly attempts to select the correct "target" symbol from a set of fixed-alternatives failed to capture the circumstances that characterize reported instances of psi in everyday life.
http://dbem.ws/ganzfeld.html




Something fucked up in the write up of the experience obviously. It's still readable though.
The cognitive science journal Cortex has just released a special issue on the neuropsychology of paranormal experiences and belief, and contains a fantastic article on hallucinations induced by the Ganzfeld procedure.

The Ganzfeld procedure exposes the participant to ‘unstructured’ sensations usually by placing half ping-pong balls over the eyes so they can only see diffuse white light and by playing white noise through headphones.

It is probably best known for its uses in parapsychology experiments, but it is also used to induce hallucinations and sensory distortions which are much more likely to occur in the absence of clearly defined sensory experiences.

The article reviews the sorts of hallucinations reported in during these experiments and discusses what electrophysiology (EEG or ‘brain wave’) studies tell us about what happens in the cortex when these perceptual distortions kick off.

Some of the descriptions of hallucinations are really quite striking:

“For quite a long time, there was nothing except a green-greyish fog. It was really boring, I thought, ‘ah, what a non-sense experiment!’ Then, for an indefinite period of time, I was ‘off’, like completely absent-minded. Then, all of sudden, I saw a hand holding a piece of chalk and writing on a black-board something like a mathematical formula. The vision was very clear, but it stayed only for few seconds and disappeared again. The image did not fill up the entire visual field, it was just like a ‘window’ into that foggy stuff.”

“an urban scenery, like an empty avenue after a rain, large areas covered with water, and the city sky-line reflected in the water surface like in a mirror.”

“a clearing in a forest [Lichtung], a place bathed in bright sun-shine, and the trunks of trees around. A feeling of a tranquile summer afternoon in a forest, so quiet, so peaceful. And then, suddenly, a young woman passed by on a bicycle, very fast, she crossed the visual field from the right to the left, with her blond long hair waving in the air. The image of the entire scene was very clear, with many details, and yes, the colours were very vivid.”

‚ÄúI can see his face, still, it’s very expressive‚Ķ [I could see] only the horse that comes as if out of clouds. A white horse that jumped over me.‚Äù

“A friend of mine and I, we were inside a cave. We made a fire. There was a creek flowing under our feet, and we were on a stone. She had fallen into the creek, and she had to wait to have her things dried. Then she said to me: ‘Hey, move on, we should go now’.”

“It was like running a bob sleigh on an uneven runway right down… [There] was snow or maybe water running down… I could hear music, there was music coming from the left side below.”

“In the right side of the visual field, a manikin suddenly appeared. He was all in black, had a long narrow head, fairly broad shoulders, very long arms and a relatively small trunk…. He approached me, stretching out his hands, very long, very big, like a bowl, and he stayed so for a while, and then he went back to where he came from, slowly.”


You can simulate the Ganzfeld procedure in your own home by taping two half ping-pong balls over your eyes and listing to the radio tuned to static in an evenly lighted room.

The other articles in the special issue are also fascinating, and range from a study finding greater body asymmetry is related to higher levels of unusual beliefs – likely reflecting asymmetrical brain development, to an experiment looking at the cognitive psychology of people who believe they’ve been abducted by aliens.

Needless to say, there’s many more fascinating studies and Cortex has the advantage of not only being a leading neuropsychology journal but also making its material freely available as open-access articles. Enjoy!
http://mindhacksblog.wordpress.com/2008/11/17/ganzfeld-hallucinations/

Comments

  • edited August 2010
    cool, I want to try it out now.
  • SilosighbinSilosighbin Regular
    edited August 2010
    cool, I want to try it out now.

    Yeah it sounds pretty freakin' cool, hey? Hallucination without the use of substances etc. Obviously both are different epeeiences entirely, but you get the idea
  • edited August 2010
    Link to somewhere where you can download the specific beats? I have a number of programs but I'm sceptical of some of them...
  • KowKow Acolyte
    edited August 2010
    I suggest listening to pink noise. It's one of my favorite types of static. Makes me think of the ocean.
  • edited August 2010
    I tried this last night and it had no effect whatsoever. Though in all fairness my sleep meds were kicking in heavily and I couldn't keep my eyes open. I wonder if the frequency has anything to do with it? I was listening to 5hz (the waves given off during REM sleep), as I thought these would be more likely to produce dream-like effects, but maybe I was wrong. After all, there's a big difference between 40hz and 4 hz but none of the guides mention any of this.

    Do you have to be fully awake to begin with? And how loud should I have it turned up?
  • edited August 2010
    For those trying to get the ping pong ball effect, I made myself a pair of 'dream glasses' out of 2 white plastic spoons, a lighter and some super glue. Fits perfectly.

    dsc00555f.jpg
  • SilosighbinSilosighbin Regular
    edited August 2010
    For those trying to get the ping pong ball effect, I made myself a pair of 'dream glasses' out of 2 white plastic spoons, a lighter and some super glue. Fits perfectly.
    Do you have to be fully awake to begin with? And how loud should I have it turned up


    Would those spoons have the same effect? Can you still see a considerable amount of light through them? That's why I used white paper (I don't have ping pong balls) as light can still easily go through it. You need to do the procedure with the lights on too, as I think seeing light is a necessary component. I don't think what sounds/frequencies you use matter too much, as long as it deprives you of other auditory stimuli. Static noise even works apparently. And yes, you should be fully awake, I presume, and just have the volume at a comfortable level, not too loud that it's annoying or low enough that you can hear outside stimuli.
  • GallowsGallows Regular
    edited August 2010
    Although the 'Ganzfeld experiment' is interesting, it seeks to use sensory deprivation to explore the paranormal. Bexton's experiment dealt exclusively with sensory deprivation, seeking to explore claims( made by Freud, Hull, etc) that said 'freedom from sensory stimulation' would bring euphoria.

    Here's a portion of Bexton's article:

    http://www.wadsworth.com/psychology_d/templates/student_resources/0155060678_rathus/ps/ps12.html

    And Dark, take Silo's recommendations and be patient. In Bexton's experiment, the participants were 'sensory deprived' for at least 24 hours.
  • L33tzL33tz Regular
    edited August 2010
    what about the water tank thing
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