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Celebrities, Web, Social Networking

'Tweance' Lets You Talk to Dead Celebrities on Twitter!



This has been a tough year to be famous. The wildfire rash of celebrity deaths in 2009 left many fans too disillusioned, despondent, and depressed to consider a future without Michael Jackson or Billy Mays. This Halloween, though, we can all lay off the Prozac or barbituate cocktails for one night and huddle around the warm fire of Twitter, where a psychic will pretend to make contact with our deceased demi-gods.

On October 30th, in what The Sun has dubbed the world's first (but hopefully not the last) "online séance," world-renowned psychic Jayne Wallace will perch on Twitter and speak with four dead celebrities, the identities of whom are to be selected by the Twittering public. During this "Tweance," Wallace, who claims to have possessed clairvoyant powers since the tender age of seven, will live-tweet her interviews with the chosen stars between 10 a.m. and 12 p.m. on Halloween Eve. (The Tweance account, by total coincidence, is also promoting a Halloween costume store in the U.K. Spooky.)

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Web, Social Networking

Researchers Use Twitter to Investigate Sixth Sense



According to the Daily Mail, eesearchers are planning to use Twitter in their investigation of remote viewing, or the psychic ability to identify distant locations.

In what the Daily Mail reports to be the first scientific study involving the microblogging service, Professor Richard Wiseman will travel to a different location in the U.K. each day this week. At 3:00 p.m. every day, Wiseman will tweet, asking thousands of participants to tweet their thoughts about his surroundings. Twenty minutes after his initial tweet, Wiseman will link participants to a Web site hosting five landscape photographs, only one of which will picture his actual location. Participants will then vote on the photographs.

Wiseman claims that theories supporting extra-sensory perception would gain validity if voters were to collectively pinpoint his location at least three out of the seven days, due to the statistical unlikelihood of such an event.

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Computers

Department of Homeland Security Considers Mind-Control Tech

Department of Homeland Security
The DHS (Department of Homeland Security) is considering offering a contract to PRI (the Psychotechnology Research Institute), where a group of researchers claim to have developed software that can pick out terrorists and even train individuals to pick out terrorists -- subconsciously.

The technology, called Semantic Stimuli Response Measurements Technology (SSRM Tek), is said to gauge a subject's involuntary response to subliminal messages. Images are shown to test subjects who press buttons in response. SSRM Tek supposedly measures those responses and understands what the subject is thinking subconsciously.

One obvious application of the technology may involve security checks at airports. Based on subjects' responses to the images and messages, "clean" respondents would be allowed through while "suspect" individuals would be taken through further testing.

Geoff Schoenbaum, a neuroscientist at the University of Maryland, dismisses PRI's technology, saying that modern neuroscience is just now trying to figure out how rats learn that a light can predict food. In reference to the idea of subconsciously sensing a person's intentions, he said, "If we could do [what they're talking about], you would know about it, it wouldn't be a handful of Russian folks in a basement."

From Boing Boing and Wired

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