Out-of-Body Experience on Demand 72
GT_Alias writes "CNN has an article reporting that some neurology researchers in Switzerland have triggered repeated out-of-body experiences by firing certain electrodes in the patient's brain. It seems that a part of the brain called the angular gyrus, responsible for logic and spatial awareness, triggers the sensation."
all the time (Score:1)
Re:all the time (Score:1)
Not that I would ever do that.
Re:all the time (Score:2)
Re:all the time (Score:1, Informative)
No offense, but you sir, have no idea what you are talking about. Just ignoring the fact that MDMA inducing an OOB in a way comparable to the dissociatives (DXM, K, PCP) is damn near ridiculous and only makes it clear that you've wanted to use it alot more than you've actually used it - just ignoring that, the psychiatric uses of MDMA had jack shit to do with OOBs. The preminent psychiatric value of MDMA is in it's ability to induce empathy and openess while still maintaining a relatively coherent attachment to the 'normal' world. A very valuable tool when it comes to therapy.
Re:all the time (Score:1)
Hmmmm (Score:3, Interesting)
Funny how those decades happened to coincide with eras of particularly heavy drug use!
Re:Hmmmm (Score:2)
This doesn't 'debunk' anything.
Re:Hmmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
The news here is that the "real" scientists, who for years have claimed out of body experiences were either lies, hoaxes, drug induced hallucinations or intentional self deceptions, have verified an experience paranormal investigators have been describing for a long time.
You're confused. Imagining or hallucinating that you're floating outside your body is not paranormal. It's only paranormal if the subject is literally able to see what is going on while their eyes are closed or something. This article did not describe the verification of anything like that. They were able to cause out-of-body experiences, but nothing indicated that they were anything more than hallucinations.
If all paranormal investigators claimed is that people sometimes imagine themselves floating outside their bodies, nobody would have called that "lies, hoaxes, or intentional self deceptions" (I'm sure it could be caused by drugs in some cases, though).
Re:Hmmmm (Score:1, Interesting)
Several paranormal investigators have claimed exactly this, but the subject has, despite plenty of research, been laughed out of "serious" academic circles. A good summary on this flavor of research can be found here:
link [charter.net]
When people like Michael Persinger do serious research in "paranormal" areas (and it looks like he came pretty damn close to nailing this neurological/OOBE phenomenon on the head) they get tossed into the "kook" bin.
The typical reaction from skeptics to people reporting OOBEs is to a priori refute the claim, usually stating the subject simply imagined it, or was dreaming, or offering other less satisfying explanations. The reasoning never gets to the point of examining whether the subjects have actually extra-located their consciousnesses or only sincerely believe they have done so, because OOBE's don't exist.
But apparently now they do.
-dameron
Re:Hmmmm (Score:2)
You're contradicting yourself, so it's difficult to argue with you.
I wrote: "If all paranormal investigators claimed is that people sometimes imagine themselves floating outside their bodies..."
You wrote: "Several paranormal investigators have claimed exactly this, but the subject has, despite plenty of research, been laughed out of "serious" academic circles." and "The typical reaction from skeptics to people reporting OOBEs is to a priori refute the claim, usually stating the subject simply imagined it.... because OOBE's don't exist"
If stating that the subject imagined it is the reaction from skeptics, why would claims that people imagine it be laughed out of academic circles?
I'm afraid I don't understand what you're saying. One cannot say, and I doubt anyone does, that an experience does not exist because it was merely imagined. One can deny that the experience corresponded to reality: the person may have been dreaming, imagining, or hallucinating. However, making such a claim does not deny that the person experienced what they did.
Also, who has called Persinger a kook? I thought his work was well-regarded by skeptics.
Re:Hmmmm (Score:2, Informative)
I don't know why, but it happens. It's circular logic and probably springs from a prejudice on the part of skeptics (or in Persinger's case because he has expanded his theories to include explanations of UFO sightings, and having anything to do with UFOs will get you branded a kook).
To skeptics 1) OOBE aren't real, thus 2) reports of OOBE must be imagined or faked. 3) Trying to fit OOBE into a traditional scientific framework (even if the claims are that OOBE are imagined, not what Persinger claims btw) the research is discounted because 1)OOBE aren't real.
I know it doesn't make sense, but it happens alarmingly frequently on the fringes of science. That Persinger's research has gone essentially unnoticed but a chance discovery by "legitimate" scientists gets CNN's attention is typical.
I could go on about this for hours, but sorry to be less than clear earlier. If I find an article that better sums up my position I'll either post it here or post a link.
-dameron
so are they really using electrodes... (Score:1)
Control Seizures with Electricity (Score:1)
I hope research like this gets us to understand more about how the brain works, but I can't help feeling that there might still be something to this "out of body" experience. After all, some accounts describe people who actually "saw" things during their out-of-body experience that were later corroborated by other people who were in the same room.
Finally, and this is the truth, you can actually purchase an Astral Projection kit. [lunamyst.com] Just think of how this new discovery will hurt their business!
Re:Control Seizures with Electricity (Score:1)
The terminal man, if memory serves, was about using electric shocks for (negative) neural feedback to control seizures.
Problem was, the neural pathway in the person so wired, included a strong masochistic pathway - so instead of a purely negative feedback, the behavior had a positive feedback overtone. The resultant behavior was not pretty, as I recall...
Now fiddling with the limbic system via wires has yet to be achieved as a regular diagnostic practice.
How is this potentially related to the Slashdot crowd?
There are the psychoactive prescription drugs, that seem to be increasingly popular, and are certainly profitable, with potentially similar effects on affects, as the recent article on the post-Columbine lawsuit is alleging.
It would be probably a good idea that a specialist in psychiatry do the monitoring/ prescription of these substances - most of which do not have the longer history of the illegal psychedelics and other mood altering drugs. The family physician may not realize the severity of some of the side effects.
Perhaps there is no quick fix for that class of problem. But YMMV...
outlaw it! (Score:1)
so are they really using electrodes... (Score:1, Funny)
I wonder... (Score:3, Interesting)
Wired brain? (Score:1)
Then it wasn't the electrodes but the fear of becoming a Borg which caused the out-of-body experience.
Awesome (Score:1)
Now you too (Score:2, Funny)
Been there, done that... again (Score:3, Informative)
I remember when I read this article, I was blown away. Something to really make you think...
Re:Been there, done that... again (Score:1)
Re:Been there, done that... again (Score:1)
I am fully consious, but I can't move any part of my body, except for my eyes and eylids.
The thing is, if I close my eyes and try to move a part of my body, it feels like I'm actually moving it.
I can "get up" and "move" around the room, but if I open my eyes, I'm immediately snapped back to my prone position.
Eventually, I lose consiousness and reawaken a few moments later, this time able to move.
I used to think that the whole experience was a weird dream, but now that I have a clock that I can see from my bed, I've noticed that when I wake up for real, the time is only one or two minutes past what I observed when I was paralyzed.
My geuess is that what is happening is that the mechanism that the body uses to prevent sleepwalking (and other movement while sleeping) has not disengaged like it should when I regain conciousness after sleeping.
Losing consiousness, then reawakening, "resets" the mechanism.
This happens to me several times a year.
Re:Been there, done that... again (Score:1)
Re:Been there, done that... again (Score:1)
That said there does seem to be a correlation between RISP and reports of out of body experiences. While not pushing a "spiritual" agenda, OBEs have many aspects that resist a simple answer - so the RISP related symptoms are almost certainly not all of the picture.
Try doing a google search on recurrant isolated sleep paralysis.
Re:Been there, done that... again (Score:1)
It's called sleep-paralysis. I can either struggle fiercly or "give up" and sink back into sleep.
I have read that it is a)the body's normal block on neuro-muscular activity when sleeping not disengaging cleanly and b)the "soul" or "astral body" is slightly "out of phase" with the physical body. This being the first step in an OBE.
I also get the rapid, exponentially increasing buzzing sounds, but have never had an OBE and don't know if they are real or not.
As for the thrust of the article, just because these states can be induced, does that mean they aren't "real". I mean, what if moving the consciousness out of the body is just a matter of perception and is akin to flipping a switch? Just because there is a physical activator doesn't deny the experience. The fact that death occurs by physical means is no evidence against the continuation of a soul.
try and think logically (Score:1)
Not that i am trying to deliver some spiritual viewpoint here; i am just trying to say that if you can create something that looks very much like something we know, that doesnt mean it is the same thing or that it came to be in the same way.
So however interesting this may be, it can never be an argument in any science vs. spirituality discussion.
Like most things in science (Score:2)
However, if you apply Occam's Razor to the situation, "people experience out of body experiences," you have two options:
1) a certain part of the brain is being abnormally stimulated. Stimulating this part of the brain is proven to produce the perception of out-of-body experiences.
2) the subject's soul, which cannot be detected, is leaving his body, and moving about the room.
Option 2 is exceedingly more complex, and therefore far less likely to be the correct choice. Your confidence level is still not 100%, but it approaches it.
Like you, I'm not trying to deliver an anti-spiritual viewpoint (I happen to have an irrational belief in a soul for some reason) but you *can* apply scientific thinking to this situation.
Re:Like most things in science (Score:3, Insightful)
Let me give you an example: I have a clock on the wall behind me. Here are some hypothesis:
1. A quartz is oscillating by feeding it using white noise generated by a device composed of chemical stuff (battery). The white noise triggers the quartz's natural resonnance frequency. The time is then indicated by a complex set of electronics dividing a quartz oscilation and driving a step motor to which is attached the hands we see.
2. Someone is hiding behing the wall and turning the handles.
Occam's Razor would put the second explanation as the simplest. I don't think it is the right explanation though.
It is not because an explanation is satisfactory that it is the right one. We have to keep an open mind.
Re:Like most things in science (Score:1)
Re:Like most things in science (Score:2)
1. It's an electronic clock based on well-known electronic processes and principles
2. A quiet introvert who enjoys people having an accurate sense of time placed a clock on a wall and hid himself behind it, and keeps himself supplied with food from an unknown source whilst twiddling the hands using another time reference.
Now it's the first explanation that's the simplest.
I don't like Occam's razor for this reason - I think you can phrase the choices according to your own biased viewpoint. It is only effective when there is a bare minimum of testable information present - lifting the clock off the wall is a simple experiment, whilst OBE's are all about human-percieved experiences, very hard to dispassionately test.
Dr Fish
Re:Like most things in science (Score:1)
Anyway, a soul would be an entity whose existence is postulated unnecessarily if the brain itself can reasonably be postulated as the source of the phenomenon. So, what "simpler" means in this case is fewer entities (and types of entities, such as immaterial souls) that we have to invoke in order to explain something. Not that a soul is somehow more complex than the brain (how would we know?).
A major criticism for any mix of materialistic and spiritual entities having causal relations (such as the one above where someone questioned how we know there isn't a *real* out of body experience that just happens to coincide with a particular kind of cerbral stimulation) is the lack of any means to causally relate a material thing ( even a force) with something spritual. The reverse, having a spritual thing cause things in the material world, is just as problematic.
Re:Like most things in science (Score:2)
1) Contrary to the popular "we only use 10% of our brain" myth, our wetware counts as the single most expensive tissue in our bodies. Any neurons not used for *something* vanish very quickly, both evolutionarily (selection) *and* over the course of our lives (atrophy).
2) Direct electrical stimulation of the brain can also make the subject experience visual effects, vivid recollection of old memories, even orgasm. That does not mean the evoked experience cannot occur in the first place, just that we can artificially makes someone *feel* that experience at will.
Thus, it seems more likely that the existance of this brain region must have some use, either critical to our long-term well-being, or used reasonably often. I wouldn't say we can claim what purpose it serves yet, but now that we've located it, futher studies of what conditions activate it aught to *greatly* increase our knowledge about the entire "out of body experience" phenomena in general.
Obligatory Connie Willis - Passage - reference (Score:2)
Deals with chemically-induced near-death experiences, I suppose in the same realm as out-of-body. One researcher studying the chemical/neurotransmitter side, one studying the meaning of the experience.
What does this prove: (Score:5, Interesting)
"What if stimulating that part of the brain causes *actual* out-of-body experiences rather than just the perception. What if you consciousness is disengaged from your body? How can the researchers tell the difference between *real* and *perceived* out-of-body? Did they ask the subjects to perform a task (such as observe something outside their field of view) that would only be possible in an *actual* out-of-body? Essentially they have proved an causal link between stimulation of this area of the brain and out-of-body experiences. They have not proved that the experience was perceived and not real."
Of course this doesn't mean it's real any more than it means it's just perception. Simply put, the experiement has only shown a causal link, without accurately examining the "effect" that follows the cause. Just because you can trigger it, doesn't mean it's fake. I would like to see them follow up with some tests of the "experience" to determine whether it is a perceptual recreation of the scene from different perspective.
Once they prove this, they will also have only proven that you can trigger "fake" out-of-body. That still does not prove that there is no "real" out-of-body that can occur under other circumstances.
By the way, I don't have any reason to believe in out-of-body being anything more than a perceptual issue, but the science here doesn't address that question.
Re:What does this prove: (Score:3, Interesting)
One's brain mediates everything, every experience, every perception. That is a relatively obvious, but pretty important theory (as in supported by evidence) of cognitive science. You're right; there is no difference between a "real" out-of-body experience or a "percieved" one. The scientists claim not to want to "explain out-of-body experiences away" but they're persistant in pop culture precisely because in the first few cases counselors were either unwilling, or not well-enough versed in cognitive theory to tell the person having the experience that it was their brain going nuts (and sometimes, these patients would go to therapist after therapist until they found such an enabler).
I imagine this finding, if re-tested in a systematic way (which will be damn hard, because the number of people one could ethically stick electrodes into is miniscule) will go a long way towards debunking out-of-body experience as somehow paranormal.
It's just like UFO's. A pannel of scientists back in the late 80's or early 90's (after the Condon report came out) were left to sift through a huge stack of UFO reports... and everyone was waiting for them to come out with a conclusion that these people were all on drugs, or that they were reporting bona fide encounters with aliens. They're conclusion: there was a small kernel of cases where the Flying Objects were indeed Unexplainable... but that these incidents represented an opportunity for physicists and atmospheric scientists to learn new things about Life, the Universe and Everything.
Re:What does this prove: (Score:1)
I know it is not a popular scientific tradition among americans and, specially, among computer scientists, but it is a pretty interesting line of thought.
It will sure be difficult to show he who had an out-of-body experience that what he saw is an illusion.
Re:What does this prove: (Score:5, Insightful)
There's something like this in Schrodinger's and Einstein's and Pauli's theories, where you can't tell if the cat's alive or not, provided you don't observe it, and that matter and energy are interchangeable, and that electrons can't occupy any energy state they bloody feel like, but that they exist only in one of a finite number of discrete states at one time, and that you can make 'em jump from one state to another, but you can never shove 'em halfway in between these states.
> I know it is not a popular scientific tradition among americans and, specially, among computer scientists, but it is a pretty interesting line of thought.
I know it is not a popular poststructuralist tradition among academics, and, specifically, among philosophers, but the notion that there exists an objective reality, whose nature can be determined through the scientific method, is also a pretty interesting line of thought.
> It will sure be difficult to show he who had an out-of-body experience that what he saw is an illusion.
A lot of people tried the "objective reality" idea, built devices like transistors, cathode ray tubes, radio and X-ray telescopes, nuclear weapons, and laser keychain pointers based on those principles.
In the meantime, what have postmodernist and poststructuralist theorists brought us, other than graduate papers on postmodernism?
I think the scientist denying the OBE-believer's claim as mere illusion has a much easier time of it than a poststructuralist philosophy student's attempted denial of everything from the 15-kiloton explosion over Hiroshima and Nagasaki to the 0.5 milliwatt HeNe laser reflecting annoyingly off his computer's display after having been aimed there by a couple of wise-ass geeks in the engineering lab across campus.
I can't speak for Dostoevsky, but I think Nietzsche would have been embarassed at you. Who, since Nietzsche's day, has done more to completely redefine our understanding of reality than the scientist? Will to Power, indeed.
Re: (Score:2)
so is there any souls exist in human's body? (Score:1)
Re:so is there any souls exist in human's body? (Score:1)
My professional opinion (Score:1)
Re:so is there any souls exist in human's body? (Score:1, Funny)
root
*********
timothy leary (Score:1)
2 of the greatest things to come out of uc berkeley... lsd and bsd unix...
out of body experiences...not Godly (Score:1)
Re:out of body experiences...not Godly (Score:2, Insightful)
> http://www.layhands.com/HowToCastOutSpirits.htm
1) Gentoo. Build from source.
2) FDISK and install Linux instead.
Move over oxygen bars... (Score:1)
Been Around For A While... (Score:1)
from the wish-it-was-me dept. (Score:3, Funny)
wow, so... (Score:1)
I've been abducted (Score:1)