Study links OBEs with neural instability and errors in body representation

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Although out-of-body experiences (OBEs) are typically associated with migraine, epilepsy and psychopathology, they are quite common in healthy and psychologically normal individuals as well. However, they are poorly understood. A new study, published in the July 2011 issue of Elsevier's Cortex, has linked these experiences to neural instabilities in the brain's temporal lobes and to errors in the body's sense of itself - even in non clinical populations.

Dr Jason Braithwaite from the Behavioural Brain Sciences Centre, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, has been investigating the underlying factors associated with the propensity for normal healthy individuals to have an OBE. As well as informing the scientific theories for how such hallucinations can occur, studying these unusual phenomena can also help us to understand how normal "in-the-body" mental processes work and why, when they break down, they produce such striking experiences.

Dr Braithwaite tested a group of individuals, including some "OBEers", for their predisposition to unusual perceptual experiences, and found that the OBEers reported significantly more of a particular type of experience: those known to be associated with neuroelectrical anomalies in the temporal lobes of the brain, as well as those associated with distortions in the processing of body-based information. The OBEers were also less skilled at a task which required them to adopt the perspective of a figure shown on the computer screen. These findings suggest that, even in healthy people, striking hallucinations can and do occur and that these may reflect anomalies in neuroelectrical activity of the temporal lobes, as well as biases in "body representation" in the brain.

Source:

Cortex

Comments

  1. Alexandre Alexandre Italy says:

    The fact that there's a correlation between OBEs in healthy individuals and certain neuroelectrical anomalies doesn't per se prove or suggest OBEs are hallucinations. Such conclusion is based on the assumption that "the mind" is a product of the brain. But that's not the only viable model or approach to studying consciousness. More and more scientists (including neuroscientists, like Dr. Hennacy Powell) are finding certain peculiar correlations that suggest the need to revise that model, and consider the brain as a receptor of the mind. Don't stop at the book reviews and endorsements and read her book 'The ESP Enigma: The Scientific Case for Psychic Phenomena'. Very insightful.
    Having said that, the fact that OBEs might be an actual phenomena or human ability doesn't exclude the possibility of the brain going haywire and producing hallucinations. Still, my point is there's enough research and evidence out there to suggest OBEs are not mere hallucinations (for instance, cases in which individuals accessed information that was out of physical reach).

The opinions expressed here are the views of the writer and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions of News Medical.
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