Can a random number generator predict the future?

In summary, Dr. Roger Nelson, an emeritus researcher at Princeton University, is leading a research project on the "black box" phenomenon which involves a box that generates random numbers and has shown to produce more 1's before significant events such as Princess Diana's death, 9/11, and the tsunami. People in the same room as the box can also influence it to generate more 1's by concentrating. This phenomenon has been researched by both the Global Consciousness Project and the PEAR project, which suggest that consciousness can influence random number generators. However, some criticize these findings and believe that the correlations are a result of after-the-fact data mining. The PEAR research does make some predictions, but they may not be
  • #1
Pseudopod
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0
"'It's Earth-shattering stuff,' says Dr Roger Nelson, emeritus researcher at Princeton University in the United States, who is heading the research project behind the 'black box' phenomenon."

They say this box that generates random numbers, 1 or 0, generated many more 1's just before princess diana's death, sept. 11, the tsunami. And that people in the same room as it, concentrating, can make it generate more 1's too.

http://www.rednova.com/news/display/?id=126649# [Broken]
 
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  • #2
So why was diana's death such a special event?
Given any long string of 1's, you are guaranteed that SOME unusual event will occur right after it, since unusual events happen all the time.
 
  • #3
I wonder how many long strings of ones occurred with no such event to be seen, or where some large degree of searching or a few days wait was required before such an event could be found.
If a random number generator does not generate numbers randomly, it would seem to me what what we have is a technical fault.

Still, my mind remains open to any evidence or explanation that emerges.
 
  • #4
Both the Global Consciousness Project( http://noosphere.princeton.edu/ ) and the PEAR project( http://www.princeton.edu/~pear/ ) seem to indicate that consciousness can influence the RNGs.

Some quotes from PEARs abstracts:

Two decades of intense experimentation and complementary theoretical modeling leave little doubt that the anomalous physical phenomena appearing in these PEAR studies are significantly correlated with subjective human processes, akin to such ineffable experiences as joy, wonder, creativity, and love. Yet, contemporary scientific rigor leaves little room for subjective correlates in its mechanistic representation of reality.


This book reexamines the role of consciousness in the light of a new body of experimental data on the interaction of human operators with various technical devices and information-processing systems. Many philosophical fibers are required to sift these results into a coherent model; but once the essential concepts are in place, human consciousness indeed emerges endowed with an active component. By virtue of the manner in which it exchanges information with its environment, orders that information, and interprets it, consciousness has the ability to bias probabilistic processes, and thereby to avail itself of certain margins of reality.

Several million experimental trials investigating the ability of human operators to affect the output of various random physical physical devices have demonstrated small but statistically significant shifts of the distribution means that correlate with operator intention, exhibit repeatable idiosyncratic individual variations, and display consistent patterns of gender dependence, series position development, and internal distribution structure.

Several extensive experimental studies of human/machine interactions, wherein the human operators and the target machines are separated by distances of up to several thousand miles, yield anomalous results comparable in scale and character to those produced under conditions of physical proximity. The output distributions of random binary events produced produced by a variety of microelectronic random and pseudorandom generators, as well as by a macroscopic random mechanical cascade, display small but replicable and statistically significant mean shifts correlated with the remote operators’ pre-stated intentions, and feature cumulative achievement patterns similar to those of the corresponding local experiments. Individual operator effect sizes distribute normally, with the majority of participants contributing to the overall effect. Patterns of specific count populations are also similar to those found in the corresponding local experiments. The insensitivity of the size and details of these results to intervening distance and time adds credence to a large database of precognitive remote perception experiments, and suggests that these two forms of anomaly may draw from similar mechanisms of information exchange between human consciousness and random physical processes.


A quote from the Global Consciousness site:

After all the caveats, however, we can say that the evidence for an effect of consciousness on REGs is strong. We are driven by that evidence to infer that something like a "consciousness field" exists, and that intentions or emotional states which structure the field are conveyed as information that is absorbed into the distribution of output values of labile physical systems. The output of the REG differs from what would be expected without the influence of consciousness.
 
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  • #5
If it was true then every one should have a small random number generator that warned you of to many ones or zeroes that i bet is even worse.
 
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  • #6
The beauty (and key flaw) in this is, of course, that it makes no predictions but rather the correlations come from after-the-fact data mining. Others hit the flaw, but basically, if you take any string of random numbers, you can cut it different ways to get different mixes of 1s and 0s. A good statastician could probably even construct an equation to model the phenomena...
 
  • #7
russ_watters said:
The beauty (and key flaw) in this is, of course, that it makes no predictions but rather the correlations come from after-the-fact data mining.

The PEAR research does make 'predictions'. (For example they tell a person to try and make the RNG produce more 0's.)

Also i believe that in the Global Consciousness Research, they did make some predictions. For instance they knew that the OJ simpson trial would be on TV and then 'predicted' that there would be a deviation from randomness.

However, you probably can't make predictions like 'because the randomness is disturbed, a meteor will hit New York tomorrow'.
 
  • #9
I think it would be a fun, though pointless study to have people "guess" the next number out of the generator, and see if they guess right. Maybe if I could guess 50.02% of the time correctly, I myself could predict the future.
 
  • #10
  • #11
Hmm...
Let's see here. The variation from the expected value is
[tex].5002-.5=.0002[/tex]
Now, that's within the expected margin for
[tex]\frac{1}{.0002^2}=\frac{1}{.00000004}=25000000[/tex]
about 25 million trials. Not really all that exiting considering that that's roughly the number of trials that they ran.
 
  • #12
Anyone know what method their RNG's use to generate random numbers? And any systematic errors that might show up after running it for so long?
 
  • #13
If random number generators told you what have happened, then two random number generators would tell the same tale with more (or less) then 50 % accuracy.

I'm sure that in a billion years there will be two random number generator that tells the tale with up to 90 procent accuracy, though I'm not a 100 % sure of how it would work.
 
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  • #14
I am wondering... It wouldn't be hard to do this kind of experiment yourself, right? All you need is a random bit generator and a constantly running(not crashing) computer.
Eventually some major event will happen again and we could see the outcomes ourselves.

Anyone volunteering :smile: ?

Or is there some kind of 'special' random bit generator needed for this...
 
  • #15
I believe that a true random number generator could not predict the future...number,let alone the future numbers...

Daniel.

P.S.It's so silly,huh...?
 
  • #16
  • #17
I believe they use radioactive atomic decay for the RNGs, so an atom decays and an electron is released and it generates a number somehow.
 
  • #18
They do have all of the information available online though.

http://noosphere.princeton.edu/

For example on the case of nine eleven you can take a look at:
"the primary results" --> 80. Terrorist Disaster, Sept 11, 20010911


Also note that because their information is publicaly available, there have been independent analyses (at the bottom of the page).
So wrong interpretation of data can be excluded, right?
 
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  • #19
http://noosphere.princeton.edu/papers/Sep1101.pdf

(E. C. May, Ph.D. and S. James P. Spottiswoode, B.Sc.
Laboratories for Fundamental Research
Palo Alto, California)

The conclusion from that paper is:

The fact remains that if our analyses and interpretations of the data are correct, then it is our view that the worldwide network of EGG’s did not respond to the terrible events of September 11, 2001.

and

Therefore we conclude that the EGG network did not significantly respond to the single largest, emotional, fearful, and well-publicized event in US history.


It seems there is a lot of messing around with statistics (on both sides probably). When the princeton people claim that there are anomalies, someone else just flips the statistics around and claims the opposite. I don't have a clue who is right or wrong and its almost impossible to determine what the 'truth' is.
 
  • #20
Such utter bullcrap (the PEAR thing and the most pretentiously named "Global Consciousness Project"). Since they claim to have "predicted" 9/11, Diana's funeral and a few other things, I just turned it on when I heard breaking news of the initially suspected missile attack in Iran (turned out it was nothing much). Not a whimper from the all-knowing Random Numbers. OK, it was nothing in the end, but if the operational theory is that these generators are picking up on the psychic states of the world's people, there should definitely have been some weird effect. But there was none.
 
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  • #21
russ_watters said:
The beauty (and key flaw) in this is, of course, that it makes no predictions but rather the correlations come from after-the-fact data mining. Others hit the flaw, but basically, if you take any string of random numbers, you can cut it different ways to get different mixes of 1s and 0s. A good statastician could probably even construct an equation to model the phenomena...

Yea right, I ain't even gonna' finishing reading um'. It's like the bible code stuff. Just like it . . . after the facts, you can dream all sorts of things.
 
  • #22
Curious3141 said:
when I heard breaking news of the initially suspected missile attack in Iran (turned out it was nothing much). Not a whimper from the all-knowing Random Numbers. OK, it was nothing in the end, but if the operational theory is that these generators are picking up on the psychic states of the world's people, there should definitely have been some weird effect. But there was none.

I think the important factor would be how much the attention of how many people is focussed on a certain event. Your 'breaking news missile attack on Iran' apparently wasnt a big deal to many people (i for one didnt even see it on the news here in Europe and never heard of it till you mentioned it).
 
  • #23
saltydog said:
It's like the bible code stuff.

That's exactly what it is. Disraeli would have felt totally redeemed by these jokers.
:zzz:
 
  • #24
PIT2 said:
I think the important factor would be how much the attention of how many people is focussed on a certain event. Your 'breaking news missile attack on Iran' apparently wasnt a big deal to many people (i for one didnt even see it on the news here in Europe and never heard of it till you mentioned it).

See, that's my point - there's no real objective standard by which an even can be categorised as a "big deal". Was the start of the Iraq war a big deal ? What about the elections ? Enron ? Who knows ?

And these guys are not above massaging even the temporal sequence of events (violating causality in the analysis) to make their point. E.g. I think they claim that the RNGs were buzzing a few hours before 9/11. I would actually be fine even with that sort of outrageous claim, if they could demonstrate that *every* event set off an unmistakable RNG buzz a certain number of hours before the event actually took place. That would be consistent. But claiming that it happens before the event some of the time and contemporaneously with the event the rest of the time is just reaching. It's lame.
 
  • #25
Cowpies - you will find more of them between hoof prints.
 
  • #26
I read some of this recently, and its fascinating in my opinion.

http://www.springerlink.com/content/t327585305rj823t/
Correlations of continuous random data with major world events

Journal; Foundations of Physics Letters

Abstract The interaction of consciousness and physical systems is most often discussed in theoretical terms, usually with reference to the epistemo-logical and ontological challenges of quantum theory. Less well known is a growing literature reporting experiments that examine the mind-matter relationship empirically. Here we describe data from a global network of physical random number generators that shows unexpected structure apparently associated with major world events. Arbitrary samples from the continuous, four-year data archive meet rigorous criteria for randomness, but pre-specified samples corresponding to events of broad regional or global importance show significant departures of distribution parameters from expectation. These deviations also correlate with a quantitative index of daily news intensity. Focused analyses of data recorded on September 11, 2001, show departures from random expectation in several statistics. Contextual analyses indicate that these cannot be attributed to identifiable physical interactions and may be attributable to some unidentified interaction associated with human consciousness.

And this paper looks in more detail at the statistics;

http://noosphere.global-mind.org/papers/jseNelson.pdf
Coherent Consciousness and Reduced Randomness: Correlations on September 11, 2001

Journal of Scientific Exploration, Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 549–570, 2002

In this paper we examine the data from September 11, 2001, for evidence of an anomalous interaction driving the REGs to non-random behavior. Two formal analyses
were made, testing hypotheses based on standardized procedures for making
predictions and performing a statistical evaluation. A number of post hoc and
exploratory studies, including work by five independent analysts, provide
additional perspective and examine the context of several days before and after
the major events. The results show that a substantial increase in structure was
correlated with the most intense and widely shared periods of emotional
reactions to the events.

They are not claiming that they predicted the attacks, just that there were plenty of odd statistical anomalies with the output of the RNG's during the attacks once peoples attention was focussed on the events. I'm no statistician, so i can't really confirm their statistics, but the scientists that have looked at the data seem very convinced.

Why did PEAR stop getting funding? I would have thought that their observations should be at the forefront of science so we can try to explain them away, and ensure that there has not been mistakes in the data collection. Now they've been shut down that seems unlikely to happen.

What are people opinions on PEAR in general? I tend to see very mixed opinions about them online
 
  • #27
PlasmaSphere said:
What are people opinions on PEAR in general? I tend to see very mixed opinions about them online
PEAR was shut down, it was considered an embarrassment to the Universtiy, and Dean Radin is considered a crackpot.

http://www.skepdic.com/pear.html
 
  • #28
Evo said:
PEAR was shut down, it was considered an embarrassment to the Universtiy, and Dean Radin is considered a crackpot.

http://www.skepdic.com/pear.html

Dean Radin aside, there are many other scientists there that came to similar conclusions.

I was hoping for an opinion on the actual data collected, and why it is wrong, not the views of a skeptic that is already predisposed to the position that any phenomeon that can't currently be exaplined by science is not occurring. What is the actual fatal flaw in their work? Skeptisism is no doubt important, but I was just hoping for a more detailed overview of why this is considered not correct aside from the witty comments and personal opinions of a skeptic.
 
  • #29
Another resurrected old thread.

How do they generate random numbers? Using electromagnetic noise? When big things happen a lot more people use two way radios, cell phones and perhaps other emitting appliances, that may change the electromagnetic spectrum.
 
  • #30
Andre said:
How do they generate random numbers? Using electromagnetic noise? When big things happen a lot more people use two way radios, cell phones and perhaps other emitting appliances, that may change the electromagnetic spectrum.

That is a very good point! :smile:

I wonder if they took that into consideration. I'll have a look through their material to see what the main reasons given for this effect are, there seems to be quite a lot of material to read through.

I still find the ideas quite hard to comprehend, as they do not actually propose a mechanism by which people effect the output, just that they do somehow. and as usual as for most scientific anomalies they try to associate quantum physics with it, which always makes me cautious, as they rarely show how these quantum effects directly relate to the results.
 
  • #31
If it is random does that not mean that it has no conncection to any other things going on?
 
  • #32
Evo said:
PEAR was shut down, it was considered an embarrassment to the Universtiy, and Dean Radin is considered a crackpot.

http://www.skepdic.com/pear.html

The Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR) program, which flourished for nearly three decades under the aegis of Princeton University's School of Engineering and Applied Science, has completed its experimental agenda of studying the interaction of human consciousness with sensitive physical devices, systems, and processes, and developing complementary theoretical models to enable better understanding of the role of consciousness in the establishment of physical reality. It has now incorporated its present and future operations into the broader venue of the International Consciousness Research Laboratories (ICRL), a 501(c)(3) organization chartered in the State of New Jersey. In this new locus and era, PEAR plans to expand its archiving, outreach, education, and entrepreneurial activities into broader technical and cultural context, maintaining its heritage of commitment to intellectual rigor and integrity, pragmatic and beneficial relevance of its techniques and insights, and sophistication of its spiritual implications. As described more fully on the ICRL website, PEAR also will continue to provide the scholarly pedestal from which all other ICRL activities will radiate. [continued]
http://www.princeton.edu/~pear/

IIRC, the truth of the matter is that the funding was cut because of a lack of interest; probably because they have never produced definitive results.
 
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  • #33
PlasmaSphere, just a note to point out that the JSE may be used as a reference for claims, but not as a scientific journal. It is not listed in the master list linked in the S&D forum guidleines.
 
  • #34
How can something random be dependant on something else? If it it did rely on something esle it would not be random?
 
  • #35
_Mayday_ said:
How can something random be dependant on something else? If it it did rely on something esle it would not be random?

I think this is an important point, if a "random" number generater predicts the future then it is not a random generatoer because it is stating that the future exists (it has to, to be predictable) and therefore the now number generator has to conform to the already set future and cannot be random.

If it is a random generator then it is either as you say, completely independant or it proves the future doesn't exist
 
<h2>1. Can a random number generator accurately predict the future?</h2><p>No, a random number generator cannot accurately predict the future. Random number generators are designed to generate numbers without any specific pattern or purpose. They are not capable of predicting future events or outcomes.</p><h2>2. Why do some people believe that a random number generator can predict the future?</h2><p>Some people may believe that a random number generator can predict the future because of a phenomenon called confirmation bias. This means that people tend to remember and focus on instances where the generator seemed to predict the future, while ignoring all the times it failed to do so.</p><h2>3. Are there any scientific studies that support the idea of a random number generator predicting the future?</h2><p>No, there are no scientific studies that support the idea of a random number generator predicting the future. In fact, numerous studies have shown that random number generators are not capable of predicting future events.</p><h2>4. Can a random number generator be used to make important decisions or predictions?</h2><p>No, a random number generator should not be used to make important decisions or predictions. It is not a reliable or accurate tool for this purpose. It is important to use critical thinking and evidence-based methods when making decisions or predictions.</p><h2>5. What are some potential dangers of relying on a random number generator to predict the future?</h2><p>Relying on a random number generator to predict the future can lead to false beliefs and decisions, which can have negative consequences. It can also promote a lack of critical thinking and reliance on chance rather than evidence-based methods. Additionally, it can perpetuate the idea of superstition and undermine the importance of scientific inquiry and evidence-based research.</p>

1. Can a random number generator accurately predict the future?

No, a random number generator cannot accurately predict the future. Random number generators are designed to generate numbers without any specific pattern or purpose. They are not capable of predicting future events or outcomes.

2. Why do some people believe that a random number generator can predict the future?

Some people may believe that a random number generator can predict the future because of a phenomenon called confirmation bias. This means that people tend to remember and focus on instances where the generator seemed to predict the future, while ignoring all the times it failed to do so.

3. Are there any scientific studies that support the idea of a random number generator predicting the future?

No, there are no scientific studies that support the idea of a random number generator predicting the future. In fact, numerous studies have shown that random number generators are not capable of predicting future events.

4. Can a random number generator be used to make important decisions or predictions?

No, a random number generator should not be used to make important decisions or predictions. It is not a reliable or accurate tool for this purpose. It is important to use critical thinking and evidence-based methods when making decisions or predictions.

5. What are some potential dangers of relying on a random number generator to predict the future?

Relying on a random number generator to predict the future can lead to false beliefs and decisions, which can have negative consequences. It can also promote a lack of critical thinking and reliance on chance rather than evidence-based methods. Additionally, it can perpetuate the idea of superstition and undermine the importance of scientific inquiry and evidence-based research.

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