Out-Of-Body Experience Recreated

Susan
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Out-Of-Body Experience Recreated

 

Original article can be found here on the BBC News website.

 

Out-Of-Body Experience Recreated

Last Updated: Thursday, 23 August 2007, 18:02 GMT 19:02 UK

Experts have found a way to trigger an out-of-body experience in volunteers.


Near-death events have triggered out-of-body experiences


The experiments, described in the Science journal, offer a scientific explanation for a phenomenon experienced by one in 10 people.

Two teams used virtual reality goggles to con the brain into thinking the body was located elsewhere.

The visual illusion plus the feel of their real bodies being touched made volunteers sense that they had moved outside of their physical bodies.

The researchers say their findings could have practical applications, such as helping take video games to the next level of virtuality so the players feel as if they are actually inside the game.

Clinically, surgeons might also be able to perform operations on patients thousands of miles away by controlling a robotic virtual self.

Teleported


For some, out-of-body experiences or OBEs occurs spontaneously, while for others it is linked to dangerous circumstances, a near-death experience, a dream-like state or use of alcohol or drugs.

One theory is that it is down to how people perceive their own body - those unhappy or less in touch with their body are more likely to have an OBE.

But the two teams, from University College London, UK, and the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne, believe there is a neurological explanation.


We feel that our self is located where the eyes are
UCL researcher Dr Henrik Ehrsson

 


Their work suggests a disconnection between the brain circuits that process visual and touch sensory information may thus be responsible for some OBEs.

In the Swiss experiments, the researchers asked volunteers to stand in front of a camera while wearing video-display goggles.

Through these goggles, the volunteers could see a camera view of their own back - a three-dimensional "virtual own body" that appeared to be standing in front of them.

When the researchers stroked the back of the volunteer with a pen, the volunteer could see their virtual back being stroked either simultaneously or with a time lag.

The volunteers reported that the sensation seemed to be caused by the pen on their virtual back, rather than their real back, making them feel as if the virtual body was their own rather than a hologram.

Volunteers


Even when the camera was switched to film the back of a mannequin being stroked rather than their own back, the volunteers still reported feeling as if the virtual mannequin body was their own.

And when the researchers switched off the goggles, guided the volunteers back a few paces, and then asked them to walk back to where they had been standing, the volunteers overshot the target, returning nearer to the position of their "virtual self".

Dr Henrik Ehrsson, who led the UCL research, used a similar set-up in his tests and found volunteers had a physiological response - increased skin sweating - when they felt their virtual self was being threatened - appearing to be hit with a hammer.

Dr Ehrsson said: "This experiment suggests that the first-person visual perspective is critically important for the in-body experience. In other words, we feel that our self is located where the eyes are."

Dr Susan Blackmore, psychologist and visiting lecturer at the University of the West of England, said: "This has at last brought OBEs into the lab and tested one of the main theories of how they occur.

"Scientists have long suspected that the clue to these extraordinary, and sometimes life-changing, experiences lies in disrupting our normal illusion of being a self behind our eyes, and replacing it with a new viewpoint from above or behind."


HealingBlight
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..... am I the only one who

..... am I the only one who wants to have a go at that? Sticking out tongue

And its use in electronic entertainment could yield some interesting results, videogames with increased player sensory immersion, sweet. (Beyond the novelty of OBE on demand, developed and purpose built incorporation into games) Laughing out loud

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check this out.

check this out.


LeftofLarry
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You're quick susan...I was

You're quick susan...I was about to post this.... Smiling


eccles
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NDE

I can give my experience of NDE. NONE. ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.

I died September 10th 1999. I had a heart attack: M.I. I went by ambulance to hospital.. I remember the trip up to driving into the Emergency entrance, then nothing until I woke up on the gurney after being revived by de-frib. I did see angels, but they were the drop-dead gorgeous doctors and nurses who revived me. I did not see any tunnels, lights, pearly gates.

There is no afterlife, no supernatural, nothing psychic. It is all in the mind of people affected by the bullshit of religion.

 

Eccles


Hambydammit
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Quote: One theory is that

Quote:
One theory is that it is down to how people perceive their own body - those unhappy or less in touch with their body are more likely to have an OBE.

I love it when science backs up my educated guesses. I've suspected this for a long time. I'm really anxious to see some follow up research on this particular angle.

Quote:
Their work suggests a disconnection between the brain circuits that process visual and touch sensory information may thus be responsible for some OBEs.

Soooo... a psychological condition that makes triggering the neurological mechanism easier, perhaps?

Quote:
Dr Ehrsson said: "This experiment suggests that the first-person visual perspective is critically important for the in-body experience. In other words, we feel that our self is located where the eyes are."

It makes a ton of sense. Our eyes have been critical to so many developments. After all, it was the ability to see well enough to read emotions that gave rise to socialization, without which, self awareness couldn't have happened.

 

Atheism isn't a lot like religion at all. Unless by "religion" you mean "not religion". --Ciarin

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