Baker, Robert

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Introduction

Robert Baker was a psychologist often referenced in UFO/abduction discourse for applying sleep, perception, and memory concepts to extraordinary experiences.

Background

He worked in psychology and approached unusual reports with an emphasis on how human perception and recall can be shaped by context.

Ufology career

Baker’s role is primarily interpretive and critical: examining why certain narratives feel compelling and how experiences can be misread as external events.

Early work (Year–Year)

1970s–1980s: Became visible in public discussions where psychology intersected with paranormal and UFO claims.

Prominence (Year–Year)

1980s–1990s: Frequently cited around abduction narratives, sleep paralysis, suggestion, and the reliability of hypnosis.

Later work (Year–Year)

2000s onward: Continued to be referenced as a “human factors” counterpoint to literal abduction interpretations.

Major contributions

Helped mainstream the idea that extraordinary experiences can be real to the experiencer while still having psychological explanations.

Notable cases

Associated with abduction-report debates generally rather than a single flagship case.

Views and hypotheses

Stressed that memory, expectation, and altered states can generate vivid narratives without requiring a literal external cause.

Criticism and controversies (if notable)

Criticized by some experiencers and advocates for “explaining away” reports; supported by skeptics for demanding stronger evidence.

Media and influence

Influential as a skeptical-method voice in a field often driven by testimony and interpretation.

Selected works

Commonly cited through interviews, articles, and references in abduction-psychology discussions.

Legacy

Remembered as a psychology-based critic who pushed ufology-adjacent audiences toward methodological caution.