Dotta Saroka Persinger 2012
Dotta Saroka Persinger 2012
The Dotta-Saroka-Persinger 2012 experiment is a single-photon-counting study correlating ultraweak photon emission (UPE) from the human head with EEG spectral power during visual-imagery tasks. The reported finding — Pearson r = 0.95 between right-temporal UPE and right-hemisphere EEG power — is among the strongest reported correlations between a cognitive task and a peripheral biophoton signal.
If confirmed by independent labs, the finding establishes a direct empirical link between conscious mental imagery and externally-measurable biophoton emission — a foundational piece of empirical evidence for any field theory of consciousness.
The full citation: Dotta BT, Saroka KS, Persinger MA (2012). "Increased photon emission from the head while imagining light in the dark is correlated with changes in electroencephalographic power." Neuroscience Letters 513(2): 151–154. PMID: 22343311.
Apparatus
- Photomultiplier tube (PMT): Hamamatsu H7360-01 single-photon-counting head.
- Spectral sensitivity: 300–650 nm. - Dark count: ~ 10 counts/s at 22 °C.
- Faraday cage: interior ~ 2.4 × 2.4 × 2.4 m, Mu-metal lined, light-sealed.
- EEG: 19-channel 10-20 montage, Mitsar-201 amplifier, 256 Hz sampling.
Subject protocol
- Dark-adaptation: 5 minutes seated in absolute darkness inside the Faraday cage.
- PMT positioned 10 cm from the right temporal region of the head.
- Task: alternating 60-second blocks of:
- (a) Baseline: rest with eyes closed, no specific imagery.
- (b) Imagery: visual imagery of "light" or "sun", eyes closed.
- 5 trials per condition per subject.
Analysis
- UPE: measured in photons/(s · cm2) at the PMT surface.
- EEG spectral power: computed by FFT, binned into δ (1–4 Hz), θ (4–8 Hz), α (8–13 Hz), β (13–30 Hz), γ (30–80 Hz) bands.
- Correlation: Pearson r between UPE rate and EEG spectral power across the 60-second blocks.
Reported result
- r = 0.95 between right-hemisphere UPE rate and right-hemisphere EEG power during the imagery condition (p < 0.001).
- Effect size: UPE rate during imagery exceeds baseline by approximately a factor of 2–3, statistically significant.
- Lateralisation: effect is right-hemisphere-dominant when the PMT is positioned over the right temporal region.
- Energy density at PMT surface: ~ 1.7 × 10−19 J/m3 (photonic component only).
Replication status
- Intra-lab: the Persinger group reported multiple replications of the UPE-imagery correlation between 2012 and 2018.
- Independent replication: not yet definitively reported in fully-independent labs.
- Replication blockers: single-photon-counting equipment (PMT, dark-count electronics, calibration), Faraday cage with light-sealing, EEG synchronisation, dark-adaptation discipline. Setup cost ~ $100k USD.
The result remains empirically interesting but methodologically vulnerable until independent labs replicate at comparable precision.
Methodological controls
The original paper addresses several alternative explanations:
- Light leakage — Faraday cage with Mu-metal shielding; dark-count baseline subtracted.
- Skin temperature variation producing infrared blackbody emission — UPE measured in 300–650 nm range, well above thermal-blackbody peak at body temperature.
- Movement artifact — subject seated motionless; movement artifact filtered from EEG.
- Mental-arithmetic / task-specificity control — additional studies (Dotta-Persinger 2011) with non-visual cognitive tasks show smaller UPE modulation.
Implications
If the result is real, several implications follow:
- Mental imagery has a peripherally-detectable biophysical signature beyond standard EEG/MEG.
- The biophoton signal is cognition-modulated at a substantial effect size.
- Standard photon-emission mechanisms (ROS, chromophore relaxation, lipid peroxidation) must be coupled to neural activity at a level not previously appreciated.
- Framework-specific predictions — the αψ Fμν Fμν vertex links neural EM activity to ψ-field excitations and to biophoton emission; the observed UPE-cognition correlation is consistent with the framework's predictions.
Framework interpretation
In the psionic framework:
- The UPE-EEG correlation is direct evidence that mental imagery modulates measurable peripheral electromagnetic-photon activity — predicted by the framework's coupling between coherent neural activity and EM/photon emission.
- The right-hemisphere lateralisation matches standard imagery-research findings (visual imagery preferentially engages right-hemisphere visual-association cortex).
- Independent replication is one of the highest-priority experimental tasks. Direct collaboration with the Persinger group's protocols would accelerate this.
Sanity checks
- No subject → only baseline dark-count, no signal modulation. ✓ (Standard PMT calibration.)
- Sleeping subject → EEG α suppressed, imagery-state absent; UPE should track. Predicted; tested in follow-up studies.
- Lights leak into Faraday cage → would mask the effect; controlled by Mu-metal shielding. ✓
- ψ → 0 (in framework) → UPE-EEG correlation persists via standard biophoton emission; only ψ-coupling-specific signatures absent. ✓ (Sanity_Check_Limits §12.)
Replication priority
The Dotta-Saroka-Persinger result is one of the highest-priority experiments for the framework to verify independently. Independent replication at the reported precision (r = 0.95, p < 0.001) would be substantial evidence for the framework's biophoton-substrate predictions.
A successful replication should:
- Use independent PMT calibration and dark-current measurement.
- Use independent Faraday cage with documented light-sealing.
- Use blinded analysis where the analyst does not know which 60-s block corresponds to which condition.
- Pre-register the analysis pipeline.
See Also
- Biophotons
- Tang_Dai_2014
- Bioelectromagnetism
- Biological_Substrate_of_Psi
- Famous_Experiments
- Michael_Persinger
References
- Dotta, B. T., Saroka, K. S., Persinger, M. A. (2012). "Increased photon emission from the head while imagining light in the dark is correlated with changes in electroencephalographic power." Neuroscience Letters 513: 151–154. PMID: 22343311.
- Dotta, B. T., Persinger, M. A. (2011). "Increased photon emissions from the right but not the left hemisphere while imagining white light in the dark." Journal of Consciousness Exploration & Research 2: 1463–1473.
- Cifra, M., Pospíšil, P. (2014). "Ultra-weak photon emission from biological samples: Definition, mechanisms, properties, detection and applications." Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B 139: 2–10.