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Research and Reference => Show and Tell => Topic started by: PPI Karl on March 08, 2008, 11:49:25 PM

Title: EVP Classification Lesson #5: AVPs
Post by: PPI Karl on March 08, 2008, 11:49:25 PM
LESSON #5:  AVPs

As stated at the end of the last lesson, AVPs--Audible Voice Phenomenon--are commonly mistaken for EVP.  In fact, sometimes they can literally be mistaken as EVP if they were not actually heard acoustically but turn up in the recorded evidence nonetheless.  However, the initials are problematic from the get-go, since the only truthfully common feature all AVP have is that they are audible phenomena.  They do not have to be voices any more than EVP have to be electronic.

However, because AVP go part and parcel with the sensory experience of investigating, great importance has been placed on their role.  Some take them to be indicators of their own sensitivity to paranormal phenomena (bordering on psychic intuition, if you will).  Others look to them as part of the "risk" involved in direct contact or interaction with the spirit world (perhaps not quite so significant as being intimately groped by unseen hands).  All, however, come away from an investigation hoping to be able to tell others their story, and "story" is dependent on the kind of sensory detail for which AVPs are inevitably grist for mill.  Consequently, AVPs are, for many, a marker of the success of their investigation, and this is why so much paranormal TV reality programming invests heavily in the showmanship of AVPs and other interactive ghost-hunting sports like seances, ouija boards, table-tipping, and other decidedly dodgy rituals flagrantly used by the so-called experts.  My own calling to the field of paranormal research, however, has less to do with such forms of entertainment, and I sometimes forget that I cannot hold everyone to these standards.

Regardless of how you value AVPs, a little knowledge about the most common varieties of them and the issues that should be addressed with them will go a long way to making your account of your investigation something others can depend on.


Unlike EVPs, AVPs inspire greater excitement over the possibility of being an active and immediate participant in a paranormal event:  on the scene, and directly experiencing evidence of a ghostly presence or hearing the words of the wandering departed.  We think of them as desperate attempts to draw our attention, or habits taken up in absentminded nostalgia for a lifestyle long since left behind in the world of the living.  This is only natural, given our own motivations to seek out proof of the paranormal.  However, we  also must remain wary that we are not reading too much into the sensual world to the extent of imagining all audible sounds are paranormal.  If AVP cannot be substantiated by the collected data, then they have little to contribute to the general cause of paranormal science.  Consequently, they should not be held up as evidence.  If, on the other hand, you see yourself as a ghost adventurer, collecting stories of the thrilling hunt, such experiences are indispensable to the making of a good yarn.  I don't begrudge the paranormal hobbyist the pleasure of telling a compelling ghost story involving knocks and sighs in the dark.   If you demand proof, however, of the paranormal, put your money where your mic is:  rely on the strength of the evidence to provide an accurate and objective record of the phenomenon.

And with that, I can finally say what I've been waiting to say for half a dozen paragraphs:  ladies and gentleman, that's a rap.

Hear are a few illustrations of the types of AVP I discussed above.

Knocks and Bangs
Music and Other Sounds
Voices
Example 1
Hard knock death (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/articles/EVP_Classifications/Miscellaneous/023_0609_AVP_LR_112558_LK.mp3)
In this particular case, the clients had complained of hearing anomalous percussive sounds for years.  Consequently, we gave any knocks like this one more serious attention.

Example 1
Give a little whistle (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/articles/EVP_Classifications/Miscellaneous/008_0614_AVP_LR_210000_KS.wav)
The content of this clip is self-explanatory.  However, it might be worth noting that whistling was captured the next night, making the repeating whistles more than coincidence.

Example 1
Go get a camera! (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/evidence/022_070428/EVP/022_0428_EVP_AO_223535_dig.wav)
Go get a camera! (amplified) (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/evidence/022_070428/EVP/022_0428_EVP_AO_223535A_dig.wav)
An investigator hears the voice of a spirit girl saying, "Help me," and the wireless audio is "rolling," turning a subjective anecdote into documented evidence.   It doesn't get better.

Example 2 (knocks
Bang! (Room 1) (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/evidence/030_070831/EVP/030_0120_AVP_FMC_003429_KS.mp3)
Bang! (Room 2) (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/evidence/030_070831/EVP/030_0120_AVP_SLN_003429_KS.mp3)
Here's a parallax view of a potentially paranormal event. In the first clip, investigators hear a loud bang in the adjacent room, where another audio source (the second clip) captures the sound loudly and clearly.  To date, no cause for the loud bang has been ascertained.

Example 2 (music)
Do you hear someone whistling? (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/articles/EVP_Classifications/Miscellaneous/030_0119_AVP_SLN_230535_BM.mp3)

Anomalous whistles are the most common variety of musical AVP and EVP, followed by singing.

Example 2 (voices)
Listen-up! (Room 1) (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/evidence/030_070831/EVP/030_0120_AVP_FMC_005750_KS.mp3)
Listen-up! (Room 2) (http://www.pacificparanormal.com/evidence/030_070831/EVP/030_0120_AVP_SLN_005750_A_KS.mp3)
In Clip 1, a fellow investigator and I do our thing, when unexpectedly I pick up a response on my Listen-up.  Once again, two sources are recording:  one in the room with us and one closer to the source of the response.

It's the first time we've been able to catch an AVP that might have otherwise been mistaken for a poor EVP in the evidence review.  Nevertheless, note the discrepancy in my interpretation of the AVP versus what Clip 2 actually seems to capture instead.