I might take some of this
seriously if I were not also aware of a body of evidence describing self directed
OBEs that pretty well confirms a movement in real observational ability. This work confirms specific parts of the
brain’s engagement but stops there.
The type of data collection is
also highly suspect in that we are using questionnaires that surely encourage students
particularly to make it up as they went.
In fact we have shown that if you ask a group of people if they have had
an OBE, that one in ten will claim. If
this were then checked against an age distribution the story would surely fall
apart. There does come a point when the
testees call the test a joke and respond accordingly.
We do learn that the brain must actively
maintain a body’s sense of self. This is
unexpected and quite like specific computer functions that must use brute force
because of architecture. Thus an illness
would plausibly throw that processing function off.
Out-of-Body Hallucinations Linked to Brain Glitch
Jennifer Welsh, LiveScience Staff Writer
Date: 12 July 2011 Time: 02:09 PM ET
About 10 percent of the general population has had an out-of-body
experience at some point in their lives.
CREDIT: © Mangojuicy | Dreamstime.com
Out-of-body hallucinations can be freaky, and are often associated with
mental or physical illness. New research has linked these experiences to
instabilities in a part of the brain called the temporal lobe, and to errors in
the body's sense of itself — even in healthy individuals.
"Seems to be that all of us can be placed somewhere along a
sliding scale, based on how unstable or erratic our temporal lobe is, and some
people are more prone to these experiences," said study researcher Jason
Braithwaite of the University of Birmingham.
The temporal lobe interprets the sensory and other information coming
in from the body and places it on a body map, giving us our sense of being
inside our body, of looking out from our eyes. If this interpretation goes
wrong, a hallucination can occur in which a person sees themselves from
outside of their body, also called an out-of-body experience (OBE).
Experiencing the body
Out-of-body experiences are traditionally thought of as occurring during a
near-death experience, but these aren't the only situations in which OBEs
occur. They often occur during relaxed and wakeful states, or during migraines
or temporal lobe seizures. About 10 percent of people in the general population
have experienced an OBE. In college undergraduates, this number is double
(researchers don't know why), usually falling somewhere between 20 and 25
percent.
In the researchers' sample of 63 undergraduates, 17 individuals (26
percent) reported having experienced an OBE. The volunteers filled out a
questionnaire to assess their mental state. Those who had reported having an
OBE showed differences on only two parts of the questionnaire: those that
indicate instabilities in the brain's temporal lobe and errors in the body's
sense of itself.
To measure a participant's temporal lobe stability, the surveys
included questions such as: "Do you ever sense the presence of another
being, despite being unable to see any evidence?” An example question from the
body-distortion measures: "Do you ever have the sensation that your body,
or part of it, is changing or has changed shape?"
Participants also completed a computer-based task where they were asked
to imagine being
in the place of a figure on the screen and to identify parts of the
body (like "Which hand is the figure's glove on?"). People who had
experienced OBEs were slower in their responses and more prone to make errors.
Distorted data
The distortion in our sense of bodily self could be caused by either
conflicting information coming in from the body, or from disruptions of
communication in the temporal lobe, which processes this information into a
body map, Braithwaite told LiveScience.
"Your sense of self, of where you are in space, is not automatic,
your brain needs to work it out all the time," Braithwaite said.
"It's constantly sampling that information and constantly making that
interpretation of where you are in space, and sometimes that interpretation
goes wrong."
When this interpretation goes wrong, it could be the cause of an
out-of-body experience.
The study was published in the July 2011 issue of the journal Cortex.
1 comment:
So, these "scientists" make the wild leap that OBE's are "hallucinations"! Nevermind that people can remember visual details not visible from their body positions, nevermind that the "scientists" deny that anything but the eyes can record visual information, nevermind that there is no science whatsoever to determine the difference between a "hallucination" (an image manufactured by neural malfunction) and a visual memory of an actual occurrence, Just go ahead and call something a "hallucination" anytime you like without any scientific basis whatsoever and the readers will remember to set aside 30 or 40 IQ points and go right along with that premise.
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