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  1. 6 de abr. de 2021 · Nina Kulagina, era una mujer rusa que pasó a la historia como la única mujer que ha tenido poderes "comprobados" de telequinesis, es decir que usaba su mente para mover objetos, "como Matilda" la niña de la película de los 90's. Se llamaba Ninel Sergeyevna Milhkailova nació en Leningrado en 1926, y como muchas personas de su época, se ...

  2. Ninel Kulagina (1926–1990) was a Russian woman whose apparent ability to move objects by psychokinesis attracted the interest of Russian and Western parapsychologists from the 1960s. Claims by sceptics that she practised deception with hidden magnets and disguised threads were dismissed by investigating scientists, and no evidence of fraud ...

  3. Kulagina, Nina S. (1926-1990) Russian psychic who demonstrated the ability to move objects at a distance, one form of psychokinesis (PK). Kulagina, a St. Petersburg housewife, has been tested under laboratory conditions by noted researchers, including physiologist L. L. Vasiliev and neurophysiologist Genady A. Sergeiev of the Uktomskii Physiological Institute, Leningrad; Czech psychical ...

  4. A documentary I made regarding Russian telekinetic Nina Kulagina.No copyright infringement intended. This video was made for news reporting/documentary/educa...

  5. De origen soviético y nacida en 1926, Nina Sergeyevna Kulagina fue una mujer que se volvió popular gracias a que demostró que contaba con poderes psíquicos, especialmente el de la telequinesis. Con tan solo 14 años tuvo que unirse al Ejército Rojo y adaptarse a la situación, afortunadamente, siempre demostró una inteligencia que la distinguía del resto, y desde entonces afirmaba ...

  6. Nina Kulagina (1926-1990) Ninel Sergeyvna Mikhaylova Kulagina (Nina Kulagina) was a Russian woman who was able to move light objects, deflect compasses and perform other psychokinetic feats. She was, and still is, attacked and vilified by skeptics, but was never proved to be fraudulent, despite their claims. Kulagina was an unassuming housewife ...

  7. psi-encyclopedia.spr.ac.uk › sites › defaultNina Kulagina - SPR

    Figure 1: Nina Kulagina levitating a ball. Source: Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Kulagina was reported to have stopped the beating of a disembodied frog’s heart and to have revived fish that were near-dead, including one that was floating upside down and another lying motionless on the aquarium floor: they swam for several minutes.