Skip to main content

Out-of-Body Experience and Autoscopy of Neurological Origin

⚑ Contested β†—
Blanke, Olaf, Landis, Theodor, Spinelli, Laurent, Seeck, Margitta β€’ 2004 Modern Era β€’ nde

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

This is a landmark paper pinpointing where out-of-body experiences come from in the brain. Researchers studied six neurological patients who experienced either full-blown out-of-body experiences (feeling like you have floated outside your own body) or autoscopy (seeing a double of yourself). In five of six cases, the trouble traced to the temporo-parietal junction (TPJ) -- a brain region where signals about touch, vision, balance, and body position all get combined. Most remarkably, in one patient, doctors could reliably trigger an out-of-body experience just by electrically stimulating the right TPJ. The authors argue these experiences happen when the brain's multisensory body map breaks down alongside a glitch in the vestibular (balance) system. This finding is a big deal for debates about near-death experiences, since it shows a straightforward neurological explanation for something often interpreted as evidence the mind can leave the body.

Actual Paper Abstract

During an out-of-body experience (OBE), the experient seems to be awake and to see his body and the world from a location outside the physical body. A closely related experience is autoscopy (AS), which is characterized by the experience of seeing one's body in extrapersonal space. Yet, despite great public interest and many case studies, systematic neurological studies of OBE and AS are extremely rare and, to date, no testable neuroscientific theory exists. The present study describes phenomenological, neuropsychological and neuroimaging correlates of OBE and AS in six neurological patients. We provide neurological evidence that both experiences share important central mechanisms. We show that OBE and AS are frequently associated with pathological sensations of position, movement and perceived completeness of one's own body. These include vestibular sensations (such as floating, flying, elevation and rotation), visual body-part illusions (such as the illusory shortening, transformation or movement of an extremity) and the experience of seeing one's body only partially during an OBE or AS. We also find that the patient's body position prior to the experience influences OBE and AS. Finally, in five patients, brain damage or brain dysfunction is localized to the temporo-parietal junction (TPJ). These results suggest that the complex experiences of OBE and AS represent paroxysmal disorders of body perception and cognition (or body schema). The processes of body perception and cognition, and the unconscious creation of central representation(s) of one's own body based on proprioceptive, tactile, visual and vestibular informationβ€”as well as their integration with sensory information of extrapersonal spaceβ€”is a prerequisite for rapid and effective action with our surroundings. Based on our findings, we speculate that ambiguous input from these different sensory systems is an important mechanism of OBE and AS, and thus the intriguing experience of seeing one's body in a position that does not coincide with its felt position. We suggest that OBE and AS are related to a failure to integrate proprioceptive, tactile and visual information with respect to one's own body (disintegration in personal space) and by a vestibular dysfunction leading to an additional disintegration between personal (vestibular) space and extrapersonal (visual) space. We argue that both disintegrations (personal; personal–extrapersonal) are necessary for the occurrence of OBE and AS, and that they are due to a paroxysmal cerebral dysfunction of the TPJ in a state of partially and briefly impaired consciousness.

Research Notes

Key neurological paper providing the most specific brain localization of OBE to date (TPJ). Directly challenges survival/veridical interpretations by demonstrating that OBE can be induced by focal brain stimulation and is associated with multisensory integration failure. Central to controversy #7 (NDEs/consciousness/survival).

Six neurological patients experiencing out-of-body experiences (OBE) or autoscopy (AS) were studied with phenomenological interviews, EEG, electrical cortical stimulation, neuropsychological testing, and neuroimaging. In 5 of 6 patients, brain damage or dysfunction localized to the temporo-parietal junction (TPJ). OBE was always preceded by supine position and accompanied by vestibular sensations (elevation, floating); in Patient 3, OBE was reliably induced by electrical stimulation at the right TPJ at 3.5 mA. The authors propose that OBE requires both a disintegration of proprioceptive-tactile-visual body information and a vestibular dysfunction disrupting the relationship between personal and extrapersonal space, both due to paroxysmal TPJ dysfunction.

Links

Related Papers

More in Nde

πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Blanke, Olaf, Landis, Theodor, Spinelli, Laurent, Seeck, Margitta (2004). Out-of-Body Experience and Autoscopy of Neurological Origin. Brain. https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awh040
BibTeX
@article{blanke_2004_oobe_neurological,
  title = {Out-of-Body Experience and Autoscopy of Neurological Origin},
  author = {Blanke, Olaf and Landis, Theodor and Spinelli, Laurent and Seeck, Margitta},
  year = {2004},
  journal = {Brain},
  doi = {10.1093/brain/awh040},
}