View Full Version : Article on the Neurological explaination of paranormal experiences


basowns
08-03-2008, 08:41 AM
Out-of-Body Experience? Your Brain Is to Blame
They are eerie sensations, more common than one might think: A man describes feeling a shadowy figure standing behind him, then turning around to find no one there. A woman feels herself leaving her body and floating in space, looking down on her corporeal self.

Such experiences are often attributed by those who have them to paranormal forces.

But according to recent work by neuroscientists, they can be induced by delivering mild electric current to specific spots in the brain. In one woman, for example, a zap to a brain region called the angular gyrus resulted in a sensation that she was hanging from the ceiling, looking down at her body. In another woman, electrical current delivered to the angular gyrus produced an uncanny feeling that someone was behind her, intent on interfering with her actions.

The two women were being evaluated for epilepsy surgery at University Hospital in Geneva, where doctors implanted dozens of electrodes into their brains to pinpoint the abnormal tissue causing the seizures and to identify adjacent areas involved in language, hearing or other essential functions that should be avoided in the surgery. As each electrode was activated, stimulating a different patch of brain tissue, the patient was asked to say what she was experiencing.

Dr. Olaf Blanke, a neurologist at the École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in Switzerland who carried out the procedures, said that the women had normal psychiatric histories and that they were stunned by the bizarre nature of their experiences.

The Sept. 21 issue of Nature magazine includes an account by Dr. Blanke and his colleagues of the woman who sensed a shadow person behind her. They described the out-of-body experiences in the February 2004 issue of the journal Brain.

There is nothing mystical about these ghostly experiences, said Peter Brugger, a neuroscientist at University Hospital in Zurich, who was not involved in the experiments but is an expert on phantom limbs, the sensation of still feeling a limb that has been amputated, and other mind-bending phenomena.

“The research shows that the self can be detached from the body and can live a phantom existence on its own, as in an out-of-body experience, or it can be felt outside of personal space, as in a sense of a presence,” Dr. Brugger said.

Scientists have gained new understanding of these odd bodily sensations as they have learned more about how the brain works, Dr. Blanke said. For example, researchers have discovered that some areas of the brain combine information from several senses. Vision, hearing and touch are initially processed in the primary sensory regions. But then they flow together, like tributaries into a river, to create the wholeness of a person’s perceptions. A dog is visually recognized far more quickly if it is simultaneously accompanied by the sound of its bark.

These multisensory processing regions also build up perceptions of the body as it moves through the world, Dr. Blanke said. Sensors in the skin provide information about pressure, pain, heat, cold and similar sensations. Sensors in the joints, tendons and bones tell the brain where the body is positioned in space. Sensors in the ears track the sense of balance. And sensors in the internal organs, including the heart, liver and intestines, provide a readout of a person’s emotional state.

Real-time information from the body, the space around the body and the subjective feelings from the body are also represented in multisensory regions, Dr. Blanke said. And if these regions are directly simulated by an electric current, as in the cases of the two women he studied, the integrity of the sense of body can be altered.

As an example, Dr. Blanke described the case of a 22-year-old student who had electrodes implanted into the left side of her brain in 2004.

“We were checking language areas,” Dr. Blanke said, when the woman turned her head to the right. That made no sense, he said, because the electrode was nowhere near areas involved in the control of movement. Instead, the current was stimulating a multisensory area called the angular gyrus.

Dr. Blanke applied the current again. Again, the woman turned her head to the right. “Why are you doing this?” he asked.

The woman replied that she had a weird sensation that another person was lying beneath her on the bed. The figure, she said, felt like a “shadow” that did not speak or move; it was young, more like a man than a woman, and it wanted to interfere with her.

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Induction of an Illusory Shadow Person (Nature)
Out-of-body Experience and Autoscopy of Neurological Origin (Brain)When Dr. Blanke turned off the current, the woman stopped looking to the right, and said the strange presence had gone away. Each time he reapplied the current, she once again turned her head to try to see the shadow figure.

When the woman sat up, leaned forward and hugged her knees, she said that she felt as if the shadow man was also sitting and that he was clasping her in his arms. She said it felt unpleasant. When she held a card in her right hand, she reported that the shadow figure tried to take it from her. “He doesn’t want me to read,” she said.

Because the presence closely mimicked the patient’s body posture and position, Dr. Blanke concluded that the patient was experiencing an unusual perception of her own body, as a double. But for reasons that scientists have not been able to explain, he said, she did not recognize that it was her own body she was sensing.

The feeling of a shadowy presence can occur without electrical stimulation to the brain, Dr. Brugger said. It has been described by people who undergo sensory deprivation, as in mountaineers trekking at high altitude or sailors crossing the ocean alone, and by people who have suffered minor strokes or other disruptions in blood flow to the brain.

Six years ago, another of Dr. Blanke’s patients underwent brain stimulation to a different multisensory area, the angular gyrus, which blends vision with the body sense. The patient experienced a complete out-of-body experience.

When the current flowed, she said: “I am at the ceiling. I am looking down at my legs.”

When the current ceased, she said: “I’m back on the table now. What happened?”

Further applications of the current returned the woman to the ceiling, causing her to feel as if she were outside of her body, floating, her legs dangling below her. When she closed her eyes, she had the sensation of doing sit-ups, with her upper body approaching her legs.

Because the woman’s felt position in space and her actual position in space did not match, her mind cast about for the best way to turn her confusion into a coherent experience, Dr. Blanke said. She concluded that she must be floating up and away while looking downward.

Some schizophrenics, Dr. Blanke said, experience paranoid delusions and the sense that someone is following them. They also sometimes confuse their own actions with the actions of other people. While the cause of these symptoms is not known, he said, multisensory processing areas may be involved.

When otherwise normal people experience bodily delusions, Dr. Blanke said, they are often flummoxed. The felt sensation of the body is so seamless, so familiar, that people do not realize it is a creation of the brain, even when something goes wrong and the brain is perturbed.

Yet the sense of body integrity is rather easily duped, Dr. Blanke said.

And while it may be tempting to invoke the supernatural when this body sense goes awry, he said the true explanation is a very natural one, the brain’s attempt to make sense of conflicting information.


http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/03/health/psychology/03shad.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1

An interesting reminder that shit is only as real as our brain tells us it is.

basowns
08-03-2008, 08:41 AM
wow didnt realize how long that shit was till i posted it


tl/dr?

Lord Krishna
08-03-2008, 11:27 AM
excellent article

VENDO
08-08-2008, 01:50 AM
"An interesting reminder that shit is only as real as our brain tells us it is."

Great quote.

Chaz
08-09-2008, 08:58 PM
What if 10 people all see the same thing at the same exact time for over 30 minutes and there is no sense of drug in their body? What about UFO sightings that the Mexican Government has released? What about all the events that happen overseas.

VENDO
08-10-2008, 07:15 AM
popular doesn't mean right.

Eyewitness testimony is notorious for being false.
Police know this, psychologists know this, lawyers, judges know this. Don't be guillible, you do have jesus, and a scripture in your sig and av, you must be guillible.
if they really do exists, if anything exists after all these years, you think we will have great evidence stacking up... If aliens exists, they have yet to come into this world. All these conventions and people that are guillible, and people make off in rolls in cash because of people like yourself, believe in this shit. Scumbags charging a few hundred bucks an hour to talk about alien stories and trying to help you. hah!
Fucking scam.

no proof, no aliens, no ghosts, no nothing. Just people banking off the guillible people so they can wash there hands in gold sinks. There is no evidence of people ever having unusual experiences, there just people with hopes, fantasies, and dreams. the shrinks, and authors are scumbag bitches taking money from sad lonely desperate for attention people.

We all once used to believe in santa, boogeyman, and the easter bunny.we grow up and now we all have something else to believe in now.
The world is based on fictional shit, we don't question it because it strokes the shit out of us. that's why personally I will never believe in it, never.

the power of belief is alot different than evidence. I would love to believe in it, but to bad I graduated 6th grade and got in touch with reality. I honestly try to believe in aliens, and ghosts, I think it would be cool, but I just can't.

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Penn and teller debunking alien abductions.

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thats my belief, I'm not imposing.

Chaz
08-10-2008, 10:48 AM
EDIT EDIT EDIT!!! Uhhh I gotta make sure I'm secure about everything because I can't just think on the spot because I am uneducated!!!! Oh my bad Vendo sorry to point out that most of your posts in this forum are edited. Look I'm all for trying to explain the unexplained but the negativity that you bring is uncalled for. I'm not going to sit here and cuss you but maybe you should go into the bathroom look into the mirror and say "I do not know everything nor can I understand everything because somethings can't be explained which is why we can not proof or disprove any of this". That'd be great thanks.

VENDO
08-10-2008, 11:28 AM
its my beliefs, I didn't say what I believe is true.

fagboy.

Chaz
08-11-2008, 07:46 AM
Nah but you proceed to beat everyone down with your beliefs you don't see me doing that I believe in god do I try to debate everyone about his existents. The answer would be no so hold your tongue for once and take out your aggression on your penis.