Grewd, the second experiment is new research. We don’t understand the “why.” We could only theorize why and hence the topic. Here, again, are my three theories:
1) The electron is aware it's being watched/measured/monitored and thus the electron is conscious; or
2) The measuring device (in Video 1) and people's consciousness (in Video 2) emanate similar energy which acts upon the electron in the similar ways; or
3) In Video 1, before the measuring device was placed, the experimenter's thoughts and consciousness already emanated the energy, and this energy stayed in place to act upon the electron thereafter. In this scenario, it would mean that thought energy does not dissolve immediately, it stays in the area (for some time);
I’m inclined to agree with Theory Three as just as when a cell phone is turned off while a text message is sent to it, the energy remains until at least the phone is tuned back on to receive the text message.
Accordingly, the thought of the electron before placing the tracking device to monitor it could be the catalyst to act upon the electron's probability distribution, and the tracking device has no connection with the electron's behavior. So with or without the tracking device, the electron would respond accordingly (although we wouldn’t know without the tracking device). In the first experiment, the "thought" shuts down the electron's wave function because of the proximity and strength of the researcher's "thought energy."
Or? Any other theories as to the "Why." Let's make this a productive discussion and think a little bit.