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Hauntings and
poltergeist-like episodes as a confluence of conventional phenomena: A
general hy |
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Written by Administrator
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sexta, 10 setembro 2004 |
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Houran, James & Lange, Rense
(1996). Hauntings and poltergeist-like episodes as a confluence of
conventional phenomena: A general hypothesis. Perceptual and Motor
Skills, 83(3, Pt 2), (pp. 1307-1316) Abstract Hauntings and poltergeist-like episodes
are argued to be products of contagious reactions to ambiguous environmental
or cognitive events. In particular, evidence suggests that the subjective and
objective effects reported by percipients are the function of independent,
nonparanormal etiologies whose constitutions have been previously established
and described. According to this multivariate model, the labeling of
ambiguous events as abnormal or paranormal initiates the reactive process
which is subsequently sustained by perceptual contagion, i.e., flurries of
paranormal observations due self-reinforcing attentional processes.
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