Chicago, The Paranormal - Supernatural - Psychic abilities. This blog is created by Edward Shanahan, a published Paranormal Spirit Observer, author, Paranormal Host, Psychic Reader and Medium in the Chicago land area.
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Thursday, December 11, 2025
Ouija Board, it's operation and effect proven by science. So why do Paranormal Investigators that claim they are using science, but yet they deny proven science?
The first thing I would ask a Paranormal Investigation Team that claims to be scientific, what is their feelings about the Ouija Board? When they attempt to give the spooky scary advice and don't use them! Your response maybe: So, you make up your own science and ignore proven actual science?
Also, for your protection, if a paranormal group calls themselves professionals, ask how much it will cost you? As the term Professional pertains to only those who are paid, all others are amateurs. Same for 'Not for Profit', ask them since they claim to be a Not-for-Profit Organization, if they can bring you their paperwork as they legally must be registered with the state and federal government, if they are claiming to be that.
Proven Science with Ouija Board.
A scientific and psychological perspective, the phenomenon of the Ouija board is primarily explained by the Ideomotor Effect.
This effect is a psychophysiological phenomenon where a person makes unconscious, involuntary muscular movements. These movements are often consistent with their expectations, suggestions, or subconscious thoughts, even if their conscious mind is not intending to move the object at all.
Here is a breakdown of the science behind the Ouija board's movement:
The Ideomotor Effect
- Unconscious Movement: When people place their fingers lightly on the planchette (the pointer), the smallest, often imperceptible, muscle contractions in their hands and arms can cause it to move.
- The Power of Suggestion and Expectation: Because the users expect the planchette to move or are subconsciously thinking of a certain letter or answer, their brain prepares the muscles for that action. This subtle preparation translates into physical movement without their conscious awareness.
- Lack of Agency: Since the users don't consciously decide to move the planchette, they genuinely feel that an external force, a spirit, in the traditional belief is guiding it. This is a very powerful psychological illusion.
- Amplification: The lightweight planchette and the smooth, frictionless surface of the board are designed to amplify these tiny, unconscious movements, making them large enough to spell out words.
The Role of the Subconscious Mind
The Research also suggests that the Ouija board can tap into knowledge that is stored in the users' subconscious mind but not readily available to their conscious awareness.
- Subconscious Knowledge: In controlled studies, participants using a Ouija board to answer questions they were unsure of actually gave correct answers more often than they did when answering verbally. This suggests that the information was held in their subconscious ("I heard that somewhere") and was accessed and expressed through the involuntary movements.
- Joint Action: When multiple people are using the board, it becomes a collective effort. Each person contributes a tiny, unconscious push or pull, and the resulting movement is an emergent property of their interacting, predictive minds. They essentially "take turns" making involuntary movements that lead to a coherent message.
In summary, the scientific consensus is that the seemingly magical movement of the planchette is a direct result of unconscious muscular movements (the ideomotor effect), amplified by the users' expectations and influenced by their subconscious thoughts and memory.
Deeper Psychological Influences
The Ideomotor Effect is the primary driver of the movement, but several other psychological concepts significantly influence what the Ouija board says and how people interpret those messages. These biases reinforce the belief that the messages are meaningful, personal, and externally generated.
1. The Barnum Effect (or Forer Effect)
The Barnum Effect explains why people tend to accept vague, general, or flattering descriptions as being uniquely tailored to them.
- How it applies to the Ouija board: The messages spelled out are often vague, highly general, or emotionally loaded (e.g., "Someone misses you," "You will find happiness," or a generic name like "James"). Users unconsciously fill in the blanks, making the message feel deeply personal and profound.
- Example: If the board spells "FEAR," a user who has recently felt anxious will instantly connect this general word to their specific situation, believing the spirit is validating their hidden struggle.
2. Confirmation Bias
This is the psychological tendency to search for, interpret, favor, and recall information in a way that confirms or supports one's preexisting beliefs or values.
- How it applies to the Ouija board: If a user already believes the board can contact spirits, they will remember and highlight the few times the board spelled something seemingly relevant or correct.
- They will ignore, rationalize, or forget the far more frequent times the board spells gibberish, nonsensical words, or completely wrong information (e.g., "ZAXN YU").
- This selective memory strengthens their belief in the board's power.
3. Dissociation and Group Dynamics
The Ouija board is often used in a group setting, which creates its own psychological dynamic.
- Reduced Self-Monitoring (Dissociation): When focusing intently on the planchette in a group, individuals can enter a mild state of dissociation, where their conscious awareness of their own actions is reduced. This makes it easier for the ideomotor movements to occur without the user noticing, enhancing the feeling that an external force is moving it.
- Social Conformity: In a group, there is a subtle, unconscious pressure to cooperate. If one person starts pushing the planchette toward a letter, others may subtly follow or assist the movement to maintain group harmony and a successful "session." The resulting movement is truly a collaboration, though everyone feels they are only receiving the message.
These biases work together with the Ideomotor Effect to create a compelling, self-fulfilling experience. The movements are real (Ideomotor), the messages are interpreted as meaningful (Barnum Effect), and the successful instances are disproportionately remembered (Confirmation Bias).
Feel Free to re-post this.
Edward Shanahan
(C)2025 Edward Shanahan
Sunday, September 28, 2025
DIY "Spirit Box": Build your own. Also how they can be manipulated to produce location specific responses for the paranormal location.
What's Really Inside a "Spirit Box"? 3 Surprising Truths About Ghost Hunting Tech
As the publisher and researcher of this article, plus over 25 yrs a paranormal explorer in Chicagoland Area, author of three books on Amazon with the last one being a 5-star reviewed book.
With the paranormal in the beginning in 1974 at the age of 16 was the start of my adventure, then in 2000 I went public, and it was basically Richard Crowe, who I call the grandfather of Chicago Paranormal, also Ursula Bielski, myself and Dale Kaczmarek.
This article is like a how to make your own Spirit Box with details of what all is needed and most likely save you money and actually maybe a lot of money.
Plus be careful if an investigator is showcasing his devise at a paranormal investigation and it is working like nothing you've heard it in the past, then the investigator states that they can create one just like it for those individuals on the investigation.
Maybe and maybe not, remember selling a Spirit Box to individuals could mean big money profit for them, since some are sold for a few hundred dollars.
Details in the article of why yours may never work like the investigators did. The reason could be due to a sound bank they added for the specific location. Remember they know the history of a location, and they know names of those attending if the investigator has the names of those attending in advance.
I do not know if any of the investigators who are manipulating their personally made Spirit Box on paranormal investigations. But I do know there is a program for laptops that is sold by a business computer software company, and its sales page does talks about adding Sound Banks to the program. I know two investigators that use the software on their laptops, as one found out about it from the other.
I have always been for the people and not the Chicago Paranormal Click as I call it. A few years ago, I offered a free paranormal tour on an app. Now I have a Free Paranormal ChatGPT that you can download from ChatGPT: Haunted Willow Springs, it comes with 18 locations and like the bus tours you pay for, the locations are free to explore. It comes with a GPS to take you from one location to another, the history of each location, and also no time limit for you to explore.
Enjoy the article below and let me know if you built your own Spirit Box.
Edward Shanahan
Coming in the future: Spirit Bells rigged and un-rigged. Ouija boards remote controlled. Table tipping and floating tables sold by magic shops and more.
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If you've ever watched a paranormal investigation show, you've likely seen it: a handheld device crackling with static, its display rapidly scanning through radio frequencies. An investigator holds it up in a darkened room and asks questions, hoping for a reply from the static. This is the "spirit box," a staple of modern ghost hunting.
But what is this device, really? How does it produce those fleeting, disembodied voices? The reality of the technology and the methods behind it is often more surprising than the on-screen myths suggest. The truth isn't about mysterious, otherworldly hardware, but about clever electronics, psychological phenomena, and profound ethical questions.
This article provides an extensive technical guide for building an advanced "Spirit Box" from individual electronic components. It details specific parts, such as Arduino microcontrollers and the versatile Si4732 radio tuner, outlining their function in controlling sweep speed and audio output.
*Furthermore, the text addresses the controversial topic of using pre-recorded "sound banks" in place of live radio frequencies, explaining that these banks, consisting of phonetic fragments or reversed speech, are designed to eliminate live radio "bleed through."
However, the text issues a strong ethical warning, explaining that sound banks significantly increase the risk of auditory pareidolia (self-deception) and provide ample opportunity for intentional manipulation to fabricate paranormal evidence.

