The market for stories of paranormal academe is a rich one. There’s Heidi Julavits’s widely acclaimed 2012 novel The Vanishers,  which takes place at a New England college for aspiring Sylvia Brownes.  And, of course, there’s Professor X’s School for Gifted  Youngsters—Marvel’s take on Andover or Choate—where teachers read minds  and students pass like ghosts through ivy-covered walls.
  The Division of Perceptual Studies (DOPS) at the University of  Virginia’s School of Medicine is decidedly less fantastic than either  Julavits’s or Marvel’s creations, but it's nevertheless a fascinating  place. Founded in 1967 by Dr. Ian Stevenson—originally as the Division  of Personality Studies—its mission  is “the scientific empirical investigation of phenomena that suggest  that currently accepted scientific assumptions and theories about the  nature of mind or consciousness, and its relation to matter, may be  incomplete.”
  What  sorts of “phenomena” qualify? Largely your typical catalog of Forteana:  ESP, poltergeists, near-death experiences, out-of-body experiences,  “claimed memories of past lives.” So yes: In 2014, there is a  center for paranormal research at a totally legitimate (and respected)  American institution of higher learning. But unlike the X-Mansion, or  other fictional psy-schools, DOPS doesn’t employ any practicing  psychics. The teachers can’t read minds, and the students don’t walk  through walls. DOPS is home to a small group of hardworking,  impressively credentialed scientists with minds for stats and figures.
  Read Full Story: The Atlantic.
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The Paranormal Activity Lab at University of Virginia
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
