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Neural Correlates of Personalized Spiritual...
Journal article

Neural Correlates of Personalized Spiritual Experiences

Abstract

Across cultures and throughout history, human beings have reported a variety of spiritual experiences and the concomitant perceived sense of union that transcends one's ordinary sense of self. Nevertheless, little is known about the underlying neural mechanisms of spiritual experiences, particularly when examined across different traditions and practices. By adapting an individualized guided-imagery task, we investigated neural correlates of personally meaningful spiritual experiences as compared with stressful and neutral-relaxing experiences. We observed in the spiritual condition, as compared with the neutral-relaxing condition, reduced activity in the left inferior parietal lobule (IPL), a result that suggests the IPL may contribute importantly to perceptual processing and self-other representations during spiritual experiences. Compared with stress cues, responses to spiritual cues showed reduced activity in the medial thalamus and caudate, regions associated with sensory and emotional processing. Overall, the study introduces a novel method for investigating brain correlates of personally meaningful spiritual experiences and suggests neural mechanisms associated with broadly defined and personally experienced spirituality.

Authors

Miller L; Balodis IM; McClintock CH; Xu J; Lacadie CM; Sinha R; Potenza MN

Journal

Cerebral Cortex, Vol. 29, No. 6, pp. 2331–2338

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

June 1, 2019

DOI

10.1093/cercor/bhy102

ISSN

1047-3211

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