Shkrum, M. J.; Johnston, K. A. (Enero de 1992). «Fire and suicide: a three-year study of self-immolation deaths». Journal of Forensic Sciences37 (1): 208-221. PMID1545201. doi:10.1520/JFS13228J.
BBC (1999): Combustión espontánea humana, cap. de la serie Ciencias sobrenaturales y National Geographic Channel (2005): Combustión espontánea humana, cap. de la serie Revelaciones.
Shkrum, M. J.; Johnston, K. A. (Enero de 1992). «Fire and suicide: a three-year study of self-immolation deaths». Journal of Forensic Sciences37 (1): 208-221. PMID1545201. doi:10.1520/JFS13228J.
«Skeptics Guide to the Universe #268». The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe. 1 de septiembre de 2010. Consultado el 13 de junio de 2016. At 26:38, Novella says: "I think that part of the knee-jerk skepticism is that we hear things like spontaneous human combustion—we know that's total BS—and then when you hear just spontaneous combustion it triggers the same response as if it has anything to do with spontaneous human combustion but it really doesn't. I hear that a lot, too, a lot of people think that anything to do with magnets must be crap because there's so much magnet pseudoscience out there but that doesn't mean that there aren't legitimate uses of magnets in medicine. We can affect brain function with transcranial magnetic stimulation, for example. But again people make that association, that's just a little too simplistic, that magnets equal pseudoscience, that spontaneous combustion equals pseudoscience, but this is perfectly legitimate."