Wellness Clinical Trial
Official title:
Consciousness Field Project: Intention Host Device-mediated Distant Intentionality
NCT number | NCT03403764 |
Other study ID # | 001 |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | April 2016 |
Est. completion date | November 1, 2019 |
Verified date | December 2019 |
Source | Merraki Institute |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
This study evaluates the potential for a new kind of wellness improvement intervention, utilizing the cutting edge model of William Tiller, PhD, material scientist and Stanford Professor Emeritus. The Tiller model suggests that through the use of focused human intentionality, the investigators can impact many things, one of which is the wellness of a population. Prof. Tiller's research found that intention in the form of information can be imprinted on a simple electric device, called an Intention-Host Device, or IHD. This device then energetically broadcasts (or transmits) this information to the study participants. This present study examines what effect an intention broadcasted from an IHD has on well defined outcome variables in adult subjects, namely self-compassion, wellness, and awakening in adults.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 230 |
Est. completion date | November 1, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | November 1, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - volunteers over age 18 speaking English Exclusion Criteria: - Subjects who cannot read, anybody with a legally authorized representative (LAR), site/sponsor employees directly involved with the study and their family members, site/sponsor employees NOT directly involved with the study and their family members, statutory minors |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Merraki Institute | Palo Alto | California |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Merraki Institute | University of California, San Diego |
United States,
Hyland ME. Does a form of 'entanglement' between people explain healing? An examination of hypotheses and methodology. Complement Ther Med. 2004 Dec;12(4):198-208. Review. — View Citation
Nisha Manek, William Tiller. Feasibility of Information Medicine as Delivered by Intention Host Devices: A Case Report Glob Adv Health Med. 2013 Nov; 2(Suppl): S152. Published online 2013 Nov 1. doi: 10.7453/gahmj.2013.097CP.P05.09 PMCID: PMC3875095
Radin D, Hayssen G, Walsh J. Effects of intentionally enhanced chocolate on mood. Explore (NY). 2007 Sep-Oct;3(5):485-92. — View Citation
Radin D, Schlitz M, Baur C. Distant Healing Intention Therapies: An Overview of the Scientific Evidence. Glob Adv Health Med. 2015 Nov;4(Suppl):67-71. doi: 10.7453/gahmj.2015.012.suppl. Epub 2015 Nov 1. Review. — View Citation
Targ E. Evaluating distant healing: a research review. Altern Ther Health Med. 1997 Nov;3(6):74-8. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Neff Self-Compassion Scale - Short Form | The Neff Short Form consists of 12 questions cover Self-Kindness (2, 6), Self-Judgment (11, 12), Common Humanity (5, 10), Isolation (4, 8), Mindfulness (3, 7), Over-Identification (1, 9) and they are rated on a Likert scale from 1 (almost never) to 5 (almost always) with the total score derived by adding the means of each subscale together. The 6 subscales measure an individual's level of self-kindness, self-judgment, common humanity, isolation, mindfulness and over-identification. Sub scale scores are calculated as the mean of the sub scale items. The total self-compassion score reverses the negative sub scale items of self-judgment, isolation, over-identification (i.e. 1=5, 2=4, 3=3, 4=2, 1=5) to compute a total mean. Change from baseline for total and subscales are tracked. Higher scores indicate higher self-compassion | 18 months | |
Primary | NIH PROMIS Global Health Short Form | PROMIS® Global Health Short Form (10 items). The 10 global health items include ratings of the five core PROMIS domains. It includes the most widely used self-rated health item (global01). PROMIS® includes a single item that provides a pure rating of physical health (global03) and another item for mental health (global04). Also included is an overall quality of life item (global02). The remaining items provide global ratings of physical function (global06), fatigue (global08), pain (global07), emotional distress (global10), and social health (global05 and global09). The 10 PROMIS® Global Health items each have 5 response choices, with the exception of the common 11-point pain intensity item ("How would you rate your pain on average" with 0=No pain and 10=Worst imaginable pain). Global 1-5, 9 range from 5 (Excellent) to 1 (Poor), with higher numbers meaning greater health. Certain items are restored (Global 7 such that 5=0 no pain, and 1=10 worst pain), Global8 (5=None, 1=Very Severe), | 18 months | |
Secondary | The text analysis Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (2007) | Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count (2007) performs quantitative text analysis of freeform participant survey comments across a variety of content categories like emotion, affect, social, personal concern, biological processes, tone. The percentage of words in content categories will be tracked over time for increase in occurrence of positive categories and a decrease in occurrence in negative categories during broadcast relative to non-broadcast periods. | 18 months | |
Secondary | Barrett Values Inventory | Barrett Values Inventory offers additional, exploratory data related to the psychological and spiritual growth in the participants. This inventory requires participant's selection of 10 values from a set of 40 values and will be taken every three months. Based on the participant's selections, the inventory quantitatively and qualitatively maps their psychological and spiritual development across 7 dimensions (surviving, conforming, differentiating, individuating, self-actualizing, integrating, and serving). Based on a shift in the selection of values, the investigators will track the participants' progression through these 7 levels, with progression over time from Levels 1-3 (ego-based values) to Level 4 (individuation - facing change) and rising Levels 5-7 (spiritual values) being expressed as positive. | 18 months |
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