Difference between revisions of "Guess for Success"

m (needs conversion)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[category:needs conversion]]
<hide>
<hide>
<if not flag=including hide>
[[responds to::1964-Rhine]]
  <echo>[[category:data/response|Lockhead-2007-01-03]]</echo>
[[keyname::2007-01-03-Lockhead]]
  <echo>[[category:1964-Rhine|2007-01-03-Lockhead]]</echo>
[[author::Gregory R. Lockhead]]
</if>
[[author/affil::Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University]]
<let name=target>1964-Rhine</let>
[[title::Guess for Success]]
<let name=respTitle>Guess for Success</let>
[[Date::2007-01-02]]
<let name=respAuth>Gregory R. Lockhead, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University</let>
[[author/ref::Lockhead]]
<let name=respDate>2007-01-02</let>
[[listing section::parapsychology]]
<let name=respRef>Lockhead</let>
 
<let name=respHdln>parapsychology</let>
[[lead-in::Parapsychology is a term coined by J. B. Rhine that covers phenomena such as telepathy the direct transmission of information from mind to mind. The landmark work is Rhine, J. B. (1964) Extra-sensory perception. (Boston: Bruce Humphries), and a flow of other publications by Rhine’s associates and others. In this extended article, Lockhead shows how very small deviations from randomness in the to-be-guessed sequence can give rise to better- or worse-than-chance guessing performance.]]
<let name=respSnip>Parapsychology is a term coined by J. B. Rhine that covers phenomena such as telepathy the direct transmission of information from mind to mind. The landmark work is Rhine, J. B. (1964) Extra-sensory perception. (Boston: Bruce Humphries), and a flow of other publications by Rhine’s associates and others. In this extended article, Lockhead shows how very small deviations from randomness in the to-be-guessed sequence can give rise to better- or worse-than-chance guessing performance. </let>
</hide>{{page/spec/response}}
</hide><noinclude>{{project:code/footer/response}}</noinclude>

Latest revision as of 16:57, 25 July 2020


  • Title: Guess for Success
  • Author(s): Gregory R. Lockhead
  • Date: 2 January 2007
  • Keyname: 2007-01-03-Lockhead
  • Responds to: Extra Sensory Perception
  • Lead-in: Parapsychology is a term coined by J. B. Rhine that covers phenomena such as telepathy the direct transmission of information from mind to mind. The landmark work is Rhine, J. B. (1964) Extra-sensory perception. (Boston: Bruce Humphries), and a flow of other publications by Rhine’s associates and others. In this extended article, Lockhead shows how very small deviations from randomness in the to-be-guessed sequence can give rise to better- or worse-than-chance guessing performance.

no responses found

... more about "Guess for Success"
2007-01-03-Lockhead +
Parapsychology is a term coined by J. B. RParapsychology is a term coined by J. B. Rhine that covers phenomena such as telepathy the direct transmission of information from mind to mind. The landmark work is Rhine, J. B. (1964) Extra-sensory perception. (Boston: Bruce Humphries), and a flow of other publications by Rhine’s associates and others. In this extended article, Lockhead shows how very small deviations from randomness in the to-be-guessed sequence can give rise to better- or worse-than-chance guessing performance.or worse-than-chance guessing performance. +
Guess for Success +
Date"Date" is a type and predefined property provided by Semantic MediaWiki to represent date values.
January 2, 2007 +