Some scientists have argued that recent meta-analyses of many different typ
es of parapsychological study suggest that extrasensory perception (ESP) mi
ght exist, albeit as a small effect. Large-scale ESP experiments conducted
via newspapers, magazines, radio and television tan generate a huge number
of guesses and offer researchers a way of quickly obtaining enough data to
discover reliably whether such small effects actually exist. The experiment
al conditions used in mass-media ESP studies are almost identical to most n
ational lotteries (i.e. large numbers of people sitting at home attempting
to guess the identity of a distant target) and so positive results from suc
h studies would challenge the notion that lotteries are unpredictable. Meta
-analysis of eight ESP studies conducted via the mass media, representing o
ver 1.5 million individual trials, indicate a very low, negative effect siz
e (z/N-1/2 = -.0046) whose overall cumulative outcome did not differ signif
icantly from chance expectation (Stouffer z = -1.60). The paper discusses t
he implications of these results for the debate about the existence of ESP
and its practical implications for lottery organizers.