by professorpan » Wed Dec 21, 2005 2:15 pm
<!--EZCODE AUTOLINK START--><a href="http://www.intrudersfoundation.org/faith_based.html">www.intrudersfoundation.o...based.html</a><!--EZCODE AUTOLINK END--><br><br>Budd Hopkins's refutation of the McNally/Clancy studies of abductees. It's long, so I'll just post a couple of excerpts. <br><br>--<br><br> <!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>Early in the Susan Clancy enterprise, any hopes I had for her <br>objectivity evaporated when I learned that her purported <br>abductee subjects were to be self-selected. She had placed ads <br>in a number of newspapers, asking for those who believed they <br>had had UFO abduction experiences to contact her. Little or no <br>vetting took place, and her unscientific protocol thus opened <br>the laboratory door to anyone who claimed to be an abductee. Her <br>subjects were not a group whose accounts had been investigated <br>and accepted as reliable by experienced researchers, but <br>instead, Clancy accepted virtually anyone who came in off the <br>street and told her they were, indeed, abductees. Some of her <br>subjects had such tenuous, even vapid reasons for believing they <br>were abductees - a "mysterious bruise" or a "vague feeling" -<br> that knowledgeable researchers would have immediately shown <br>them the door. The uncritical Dr. Clancy, however, made them <br>part of the "abductee" group she studied!<br><br>Anyone familiar with the phenomenon is aware that very few <br>abductees will come forward to discuss their experiences <br>publicly, or to subject themselves to "testing" of any kind by <br>people or organizations that they do not know and trust. Doing <br>so would be to run the very real risk of becoming targets for <br>career-threatening ridicule. Obviously, the more highly <br>credentialed abductees are the most hesitant to volunteer as <br>test subjects because they have the most to lose. Neither the <br>NASA research scientist, the NASA engineer, nor the many <br>psychiatrists, psychologists, police officers and military <br>professionals who, over the years, have reported their abduction <br>experiences to me, would ever involve themselves in what might <br>well turn out to be sensationalist and incompetently mounted <br>tests of one kind or another. Adding to that basic flaw in her <br>study, my second concern had to do with the fact that neither <br>Clancy, whom I had twice met, nor McNally made any attempt to <br>contact Dr. David Jacobs or me. They were both undoubtedly aware <br>that the two of us have accumulated between us masses of data <br>after decades of work with literally hundreds of abductees. We <br>were never consulted on any issue, nor was our help in vetting <br>test subjects called for. In retrospect, Dr. Jacobs and I could <br>have easily prevented the two testers - innocent of the complex <br>work of actual investigation - from making many of the egregious <br>errors which have so seriously damaged their work.<br><br>The results of McNally's test for signs of posttraumatic stress <br>disorder were significant. Those reporting abductions showed <br>virtually the same intensely emotional reactions upon hearing <br>their taped accounts replayed as did the Vietnam vets when they <br>heard the tapes of their traumatic war experiences. But as we <br>soon learned in McNally's analysis of the test results, the <br>devil was not in the details themselves but in his <br>interpretation of the details. He announced that, since we <br>"know" that UFO abductions don't exist, all of his subjects' <br>accounts have to be false memories. And since they registered <br>just as powerfully as "true" memories, what the test shows, he <br>explained, is that "false" memories can be just as traumatic as <br>"real" memories! This classic illustration of "heads I win, <br>tails you lose" circular reasoning provides a perfect example of <br>ideology trumping science. Unfortunately, as astronomer J. Allen <br>Hynek once remarked, science is not always what scientists do. <br>In effect, McNally seemed to be saying that even if his own test <br>results support the traumatic reality of the abduction <br>phenomenon, that fact changes nothing since UFO ABDUCTIONS JUST <br>DO NOT EXIST, and that somehow, someway, he will make his test <br>results fit his hypothesis! McNally's ideological interpretation <br>of the test results - a clear example of "faith-based science" -<br> is just as rigid in its way as the creationists' willful <br>denigration of evolution, no matter what the fossil records have <br>revealed.<br><br>Susan Clancy's word memorization test as an indication of false <br>memories is far more tenuous than McNally's test for the <br>presence of posttraumatic stress. (This is perhaps not the place <br>to go into its technical inadequacies, other than to reiterate <br>what I have already said about its fatal flaw - the reliance <br>upon an unvetted, self-selected sample. I will return to the <br>specifics of her work in a later paper.) Instead, the problem I <br>would like to discuss is her use of a rather simple word <br>memorization protocol to ratify her belief that a subject's <br>demonstrably traumatic memories are false. Clancy baldly stated <br>in an early newspaper interview that she assumed everyone would <br>accept the idea that all abduction experiences were false <br>memories, because "everyone" knew there were no such things as <br>UFO abductions. This, she apparently thought, was settled truth <br>- and another illustration of irrational, faith-based science. <br>So, at the outset of their work, neither she nor McNally <br>intended to raise even the possibility that such things as UFO <br>abductions might have occurred, let alone to actually <br>investigate that possibility. The ideology they shared assumed <br>that such experiences were, ipso facto, false memories, a theory <br>the two seem to believe as fervently as the Pope believes in the <br>virgin birth.<br><br>Another analogy comes to mind. Instead of a group of abductees, <br>imagine an equal number of women who have reported rape <br>experiences and who are now to be tested by a pair of <br>experimental psychologists. The psychologists state at the <br>outset that they do not believe any of these women were actually <br>raped and are proceeding on that assumption. Thus their goal is <br>not to investigate the veracity of the women's claims but to <br>discover a way of establishing their "tendencies to fantasize <br>and form false memories." Since the testers "know" in advance <br>that these rape memories are false, no police investigation into <br>the alleged rape accounts is necessary - no examination of <br>physical or medical evidence, no visits to alleged crime scenes, <br>no interviews with possible witnesses, and no checks on the <br>reputations of the rape victims. In short, nothing will be <br>undertaken that might support the reality of their experiences. <br>An outrageous, even inhumane idea, of course, but analogous to <br>the Clancy-McNally attitude to UFO abductees.<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--><br><br>snip<br><br><!--EZCODE QUOTE START--><blockquote><strong><em>Quote:</em></strong><hr>Clancy also indicts the use of hypnosis as the medium by which <br>false memories are implanted in unsuspecting clients by <br>unscrupulous hypnotists. The problem with this theory is that <br>about 30% of the thousands of UFO abduction reports researchers <br>have investigated were recalled without the use of hypnosis. <br>Beyond that, virtually all abductees recall at least some <br>aspects of their experiences without hypnosis. Otherwise, they <br>would have had no reason to contact an investigator in the first <br>place. In the light of these facts, the "hypnosis explanation" <br>as to how "false" abduction recollections are generated also <br>collapses.<br><br>It should be added that further doubts about the efficacy of <br>hypnosis in inducing false memories have been raised by recent <br>experimental studies, such as the work of psychologists Steven <br>Lynn and Irving Kirsch. They summarize their results this way: <br>"The most appropriate conclusion that can be drawn from the <br>evidence is that hypnosis does not reliably produce more false <br>memories than are produced in a variety of non-hypnotic <br>situations in which misleading information is conveyed to <br>participants." It is also a matter of record that many <br>hypnotherapists with no knowledge of the abduction phenomenon <br>have, to their surprise, uncovered traumatic abduction <br>recollections in subjects with whom they were working. In fact, <br>Dr. Benjamin Simon, a psychiatrist highly skeptical of UFO <br>reality who was treating Betty and Barney Hill for post <br>traumatic stress, uncovered details of their terrifying <br>abduction experience in what is now seen as the first <br>systematically investigated UFO abduction case. Obviously, <br>during hypnosis, his personal skepticism had no effect <br>whatsoever on the Hills' recollections. There are many reasons <br>to trust the process of hypnosis, if it is handled carefully and <br>skeptically, with the use of false leads and other validating <br>techniques (all of which I have discussed elsewhere). But it <br>should be clear by now that objective science must reject <br>Clancy's theory that hypnosis per se is implicated in the <br>wholesale generation of false memories.<hr></blockquote><!--EZCODE QUOTE END--> <p></p><i></i>