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Greg Kolodziejzyk's 13-Year Associative Remote Viewing Experiment Results

📄 Original study
Kolodziejzyk, Greg 2012 Modern Era remote_viewing

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Plain English Summary

One person spent thirteen years trying to predict financial markets using psychic impressions -- then bet real money on the results. Across nearly 5,700 trials, his accuracy sat modestly above chance, but when he filtered for only his most confident predictions, it jumped to a stunning 78%. He made 181 real trades and walked away with over $146,000 in profit. Later rounds used an automated system so he couldn't unconsciously bias his bets. Most striking: his performance held steady across all thirteen years with no sign of fading.

Research Notes

Longest ARV study on record. Demonstrates practical financial application of RV with real monetary stakes. Modified consensus protocol with confidence weighting is methodological innovation. Self-judging limitation. Connects to SRI/SAIC RV program and Harary/Targ silver futures studies. Automated trading system (2010+) reduces operator bias.

Thirteen-year single-operator ARV study (1998–2011): 5,677 trials across 285 project questions, primarily futures market predictions. Modified protocol: self-judging with confidence scores (0.1–4.0), computer-managed randomization, consensus from nested trials. Results: 52.65% trial accuracy (z=4.0, p<0.00003); 60.3% project questions correct (z=3.49); confidence filtering (>3.25) achieved 78.1% accuracy. Automated trading (2010+) blinded operator to market identity. 181 trades with capital at risk: 60% profitable, $146,587 net profit. Cumulative z-score steady over 13 years without decline.

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📋 Cite this paper
APA
Kolodziejzyk, Greg (2012). Greg Kolodziejzyk's 13-Year Associative Remote Viewing Experiment Results. Journal of Parapsychology.
BibTeX
@article{kolodziejzyk_2012_greg,
  title = {Greg Kolodziejzyk's 13-Year Associative Remote Viewing Experiment Results},
  author = {Kolodziejzyk, Greg},
  year = {2012},
  journal = {Journal of Parapsychology},
}