Daryl Bem, Ph.D.

Daryl Bem, Ph.D., professor of psychology at Cornell University, obtained his BA degree in physics from Reed College in 1960, and began graduate work in physics at MIT. The civil rights movement had just begun, and he became so intrigued with the changing attitudes toward desegregation in the American South that he decided to switch fields and pursue a career as a social psychologist specializing in attitudes and public opinion. He obtained his PhD degree in social psychology from the University of Michigan in 1964, and has since taught at Carnegie-Mellon University, Stanford, Harvard, and Cornell University, where he has been since 1978.

Professor Bem has published on several diverse topics in psychology, including group decision making, self-perception, personality theory, ESP, and sexual orientation. He is coauthor of an introductory textbook in psychology and the author of Beliefs, Attitudes, and Human Affairs (1970) and Exotic Becomes Erotic: Explaining the Enigma of Sexual Orientation (forthcoming).

Professor Bem has presented testimony to a subcommittee of the United States Senate on the psychological effects of police interrogation and has served as an expert witness in several court cases involving sex discrimination.

    Presentations

    IRVA 2006 – Three Laboratory Demonstrations of Precognition


    The goal of my research program has been to create a straightforward, transparent laboratory demonstration of psi that could be replicated by any competent experimenter-including a skeptical one-using participants drawn from the general population. So far, we have observed three phenomena that appear to achieve this goal:
    Precognitive Detection of Arousal
    Precognitive Déjà vu
    Precognitive Habituation
    These phenomena will be described and discussed.

    Video