When
the retrocausal effect is absent, the differences of the mean values of the
heart rates tend to zero and the lines vary around the baseline (the 0.00
line), whereas the stronger is the retrocausal effect and the more the lines
separate from the baseline. A detailed description of this experiment is
available in the books “Retrocausality: experiments and theory”[1],
“A syntropic model of consciousness”[2]
and “The methodology of concomitant variations”[3]
The Vital Needs Theory - page 8
[1] Vannini, A. and Di Corpo, U. Retrocausality:
experiments and theory, ISBN: 9781520275956, www.amazon.com/dp/1520275951
[2] Vannini, A., A Syntropic
model of consciousness, ISBN: 9781520834412, www.amazon.com/dp/1520834411
[3] Di Corpo, U. and Vannini, A., The
methodology of concomitant variations, ISBN: 9781520326634, https://www.amazon.com/dp/1520326637