// EXPERIMENTAL · PAPER TRADING ONLY · NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE //

GOVERNMENT ARCHIVE

An Evaluation of Remote Viewing: Research and Applications

The CIA-commissioned AIR report reviewed the Star Gate remote-viewing program, including sharply different expert assessments by statistician Jessica Utts and psychologist Ray Hyman.

MIXEDEvidence tier 11995

Key findings

  • The report distinguishes laboratory statistical claims from operational intelligence usefulness.
  • Utts argued that some statistical effects exceeded chance expectations.
  • Hyman argued that methodological and independent-replication issues prevented strong conclusions.
  • The practical intelligence value was judged unreliable enough that the program was not continued as an operational capability.

Critical context

This is the most important balanced source for the platform because it contains both favorable and skeptical expert interpretations in the same review context.

Protocol lesson for Go Remote Viewing

TargetRelay should separate target-hit metrics from market-hit metrics and operational paper-trading outcomes, rather than blending them into one claim.

Preservation copy

Rights: PUBLIC DOMAIN

Archive policy
Preservation copy: The 1995 AIR/CIA evaluation is treated here as a public government archive source. GRV preserves a neutral plain-text guide to the document, its major participants, and the split expert conclusions so the research context remains available even if links move. The record should still direct readers to the CIA Reading Room source for document images, page numbering, and official context.

Government archive material may be preserved more fully than copyrighted journal material, but GRV still labels source, stance, and limitations.

CIA AIR 1995 Remote Viewing Evaluation Summary | Go Remote Viewing