Introduction  
    
    Formal Specification Registry 
    Scheduled Regular Events 
    Scheduled Unique Events 
    Unpredictable Events 
 
    Introduction 
     
    The ability to discern effects of Global Consciousness depends on clear scientific
    questions that can be made into procedures for examining the data. There are various ways to
    do this but most have some form of prediction and confirmation as their base. In this
    Hypothesis Registry, we will identify some general expectations and several classes of
    specific predictions. 
The particular descriptions in most cases refer to a "standard
analysis", which is described algorithmically in the Methodology
section.  In all cases, the combination of the information provided in
the hypothesis with the external description of an analysis recipe will completely define the
procedures to be followed.
During the early phases of the project, we will be making a variety
    of types of hypothesis, based on our developing ideas about what
    might make a difference. We have only a little experience, and we will welcome comment
    and suggestions. You are welcome also to make your own hypotheses, which will be included
    in the registry if they meet our criteria for specificity and relevance, discussed in the methodology section as well as in the "make
    a difference" note above.   
    We will
hypothesize effects linked
    with known events, such as New Years celebrations and other widely celebrated and
    historically valued holidays, and certain globally interesting scheduled events such as
    World Cup Soccer and the Olympics. 
    Also known ahead of time, but
    with no regular schedule or repetition, are widely publicized ceremonies such as the
    Princess Diana and Mother Teresa funerals. In this category we also may place some unusual
    "cosmic" events such as major conjunctions, comets, and solar eclipses. 
    Unpredictable events like major
    earthquakes, the
    fall of the Berlin wall, the assassination of Prime Minister Rabin, or the detonation of
    atomic weapons in India and Pakistan gather worldwide attention. These will constitute an
    important class of hypotheses for an effect on the EGG network of a large-scale
    concatenation of interest and attention in a unified mode. 
    On the most global level, we
    predict that there will be some order in the distributed matrix of data. But the design of
    equipment and protocols predicates that the data will be random, that is, there should be
    no temporal or correlational structure beyond that expected by chance. Therefore, the
    appearance of such structure, even in the absence of perceived events with importance to
    us, may be an indication of the unified global consciousness we hypothesize. We expect
    certain multi-dimensional analyses to help identify global structure and distinguish it
    from effects of mundane physical sources. 
    As discussed more fully in the
    GCP methodology description, the
    event-related predictions specify hypothesized effects on the network of REG devices to be
    co-temporaneous with the event. The times in our data
    displays will be presented in coordinated Universal Time (UTC) also known as Greenwich
    Mean Time (GMT). For example, to discover whether there is structure in the data related
    to a prominent event reported in Switzerland, one hour (two in summer time) must be added
    to the UTC time to identify the event: 01:20 UTC = 03:20 in Switzerland in the Summer. 
    Many of
the hypotheses in this
    registry are evaluated in a hand calculation, using the 15-minute Z-scores provided in the
    egg summary tables.
    All the Z-scores generated during the period specified in the
hypothesis are squared and
    summed, to produce a Chi-square distributed quantity with degrees of freedom equal to the
    number of Z-scores. The probability of this Chi-square, which can be found using a Chi-square
    test calculator, represents an estimate of the likelihood that the composite deviation
    of the REG devices during this time was a chance fluctuation. 
    The descriptions and analyses
    here are done carefully, but they should be regarded as preliminary tests of the
    experimental hypothesis.  The probability thresholds of 0.10 and 0.05 represent an
    estimated chance occurrence of so much apparent structure less than 10% or 5% of the time,
    respectively.
     
    Introduction 
    Scheduled Regular Events 
    Scheduled Unique Events 
    Unpredictable Events 
    Formal Specification Registry  |