Canadian Agencies Cameron received funding for experiments through 3 government bodies. The
National Research Council (NRC) provided funding for experiments on "psychological aspects of return to industrial civilian life" and "reactions of civilians to community disasters" from 1944-1946. The
Defence Research Board (DRB) funded two projects between 1948 and 1951 respectively titled "Management of Fear and Anxiety by Civilians in the Event of a Community Disaster" and "Behavioural Problems in the Adaptation of White Man to the Arctic". Finally, he received funding through the
Department of National Health and Welfare ("H&W"). Between 1950 and 1964, 10 projects on which Dr. Cameron is named as
principal investigator received grants (totaling $495,444.41) from the Department of National Health and Welfare. Out of these 10 projects, 6 of them appear to have been submitted under Cameron's name as department head, but did not involve his participation. The following are a list of the 4 programs (the first 2 not directly related to the subject of this article) funded by the Department of National Health and Welfare on which Dr. Cameron was principal investigator: • "A Study of the Effects of
Nucleic Acid Upon Memory Impairment in the Aged" • "The Influence of Psychotropic Drugs upon Cerebral Responses to Peripheral Stimulation in Man" (finished by a Dr. Davis after Cameron's retirement) • "Support for a Behavioural Laboratory" (funded for $17,875.00) which included experiments to: • test memory and learning impairment due to individual and cumulative electric shock • film patients against a checkered backdrop before and after ECT treatment, to see if any differences in physical movements could be detected • study the effects of sensory isolation • investigate psychic driving techniques in various situations: while the patient was under hypnosis, in continuous sleep, and when the patient's resistance was lowered using the isolation techniques of Dr. Hebb. • "Study of Factors which Promote or Retard Personality Change in Individuals Exposed to Prolonged Repetition of Verbal Signals" (i.e. psychic driving) (funded for $51,860.00), one of the seven manuals which were declassified by the
Pentagon in 1996, often referred to as the "torture manuals".
Investigation In 1985, responding to a lawsuit on the matter, the
Minister of Justice of Canada,
John Crosbie, requested a report be written on the experiments of Dr. Cameron, with particular attention to be paid to funding and the Canadian Government's potential liability in the case. The matter was investigated by attorney and former MP for
Halifax,
George Cooper, who found that allegations made out in the lawsuit relating to the use of depatterning, psychic driving and sensory isolation in Dr. Cameron's experiments were factual and that the use of depatterning and psychic driving in medicine were not based on sound principles. His final conclusion on the matter, however, was that the Department of National Health and Welfare had not acted irresponsibly in funding the experiments, stating:"In conclusion, it is my opinion that in relation to the structure and operation of its granting procedures, the Department of National Health and Welfare conducted itself at all times in a prudent and professional manner. The practice of careful internal review of all applications, followed by a referral of the applications to two experts in the particular field from outside the Department for detailed and anonymous scrutiny and comment, followed in turn by a review by the panel of qualified outside experts forming the Mental Health Advisory Committee and its Research Sub-Committee, in my opinion demonstrates the good faith and competence of the public servants responsible."The Cooper report was criticized by the lawyer who represented the Montreal Experiment victims against the CIA for lacking independence from the government and for not interviewing any of the victims or their families. == Treatment ==