Mind May Affect Machines
For 26 years, strange conversations have been taking place in a basement lab at Princeton University.
No one can hear them, but they can see their apparent effect: balls that go in certain directions on command, water fountains that seem to rise higher with a wish and drums that quicken their beat.
Yet no one hears the conversations because they occur between the minds of experimenters and the machines they will to action.
Using random event generators -- computers that spew random output -- they have participants focus their intent on controlling the machines' output. Out of several million trials, they've detected small but "statistically significant" signs that minds may be able to interact with machines. However, researchers are careful not to claim that minds cause an effect or that they know the nature of the communication.
http://wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,68216,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_5
Labels: A.I., artificial intelligence, mind and machines