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Title: The Out of Body Experience Near Death


1
The Out of Body Experience Near Death
  • UC San Diego, COGS 175 Final Presentation, Group
    14
  • Yasmin Ghochani
  • Gayatri Boddupalli
  • Rosa Sonia Miguel
  • Sayaka Uchida

2
Presentation Outline
  • What is a NDE?
  • What is an OBE?
  • Neural Correlates of OBE?
  • How does OBE relate to NDE?

3
What is a near death experience (NDE)?
  • Experiences reported by individuals who have been
    close to dying or who have been pronounced
    clinically dead and then resuscitated
  • We hypothesize that
  • NDE is a changed state of consciousness
  • OBE is a basic component of NDE

4
Characteristics of NDE
  • History scientific study began with Moody (Life
    after Life, 1975)
  • 150 case reports with these commonalities
  • Overwhelming feeling of peace and well-being,
    free from pain
  • Floating or drifting through darkness
  • Awareness of a golden light
  • Encountering/Communicating with a presence
  • Rapid Succession of visual images of ones past
  • Experiencing another world, meeting past
    acquaintances
  • The impression of being located outside ones
    physical body (OBE)

5
Measuring NDE
  • Greysons Three Point Scale (1983)

6
Results, Lange et al.
7
Is there a core NDE?
  • Lange, Greyson, Houran (2004) evaluate Greysons
    scale using the Rasch model
  • Results
  • There is a hierarchy of NDE experiences
  • OBE is one of the characteristic, basic
    experiences of NDE
  • Hierarchy is invariant across gender, current
    age, age of NDE, latency between NDE and report
  • Conclusion Yes, there is a core NDE. Basic
    structure and semantics are preserved regardless
    of intensity of NDE and demographics

8
What is an out of body experience (OBE)?
  • Ones visuo-spacial perspective and ones self
    are experience to have departed from their
    habitual position within ones body
  • Disembodiment
  • Extracoporeal egocentric perspective
  • Autoscopy
  • What produces it?
  • OBEs are components of near death experiences
  • A fundamental characteristic of NDE according to
    Lange et als analysis

9
Examples of OBE
  • Suddenly it was as if he saw himself in the bed
    in front of him. He felt as if he were at the
    other end of the room, (Blanke and Arzy, 2005)

10
Autoscopic Phenomenon
  • Autoscopy is a visual illusion of your own body.
  • Three types of autoscopic phenomena
  • Autoscopic hallucination Seeing your double but
    viewpoint is still from your own body
  • Heautoscopy Seeing your double but not sure
    where youre located
  • OBE Seeing your double, but the viewpoint is
    from your double. Supine position.

11
Out of Body Experience
  • Failure to integrate multisensory information
    from ones own body at the temporo-parietal
    junction (TPJ)
  • Disruption of phenomenological and cognitive
    aspects of self-processing, causing illusory
    reduplication, illusory self-location, illusory
    perspective and illusory agency

12
OBE Patients
  • Predominantly in patients with epilepsy and
    migraine (Lippman, 1953)
  • Devinskey et al. 1989
  • Nonlesional epilepsy
  • Epilepsy due to an arteriovenous malformation
  • Posttraumatic brain damage
  • Blanke et al. 2004
  • Dysembryoplastic tumor
  • Induced by focal electrical stimulation

13
Clinical Findings in Neurological OBE Patients
with Focal Brain Damage
  • These studies reveal that most OBEs are related
    to focal epilepsy in the right temporal and/or
    parietal lobe.

14
MRI-Based lesion overlap analysis in OBE Patients
(Blanke et al. 2004)
Implication of the TPJ in all patients OBE can
be induced by electrical stimulation of the TPJ
(2002) 75 of patients had right hemi-spheric
brain Damage
15
Disturbed Own-body Processing
  • Association to vestibular sensations
  • Graviceptive (ortholithic) sensations evoked in
    regions where higher currents induced OBE (Blanke
    et al. 2002)
  • Feelings of elevation and floating
  • 180 degree inversion of ones body and
    visuo-spacial perspective in extrapersonal space
  • Proxymal vestibular dysfunction (Grusser and
    Landis, 1991)
  • Paroxysmal visual body-part illusion
  • Supernumerary phantom limbs or illusiory limb
    tansformations
  • Integration of proprioceptive, tactile and visual
    information of ones body fails due to discrepant
    central representation of the different sensory
    systems
  • Both of the above are present to lead to OBE

16
Visual Body-part Illusions Accompanying OBE
Induced by electrical stimulation at the right TPJ
17
Multisensory Disintegration at the TPJ Leads to
OBE
18
Temporo-parietal Junction
  • Core region of vestibular cortex situated at the
    TPJ including the posterior insula
  • Implication of TPJ and cortical areas along the
    intraparietal sulcus in combining tactile,
    proprioceptive, and visual information in
    coordinated reference frame
  • TPJ?perception of body parts, entire body,
    biological motion, mental imagery with respect to
    ones own body (not only visual input but
    movement, thus proving role in multisensory
    perception)
  • TPJ?ego-centric visuo-spatial perspective taking,
    agency, self-other distiction (self at a third
    person perspective)

19
Activation in EBA and TPJ code differentially for
embodiment
  • EEG recording, EP mapping, and distributed linear
    inverse solution (Arzy et al. 2006)
  • Own body Transformation task (OBE)
  • Mirror task (MIR)

20
Results
  • Generators of MapMIR (top row) were localized at
    the left EBA and of MapOBT (bottom row) at the
    right TPJ and left EBA.
  • Timing of the Activations
  • TPJ activation was 50ms later than EBA
    activation in OBE Task
  • EBA linded to visual processing of human bodies
    and also responds to actual and imagined
    movements of ones own arm (Astafiev et al. 2004)

21
Spontaneous OBE vs. OBE near death
  • Spontaneous OBE vs. OBE near death
  • Spontaneous OBErs score higher on measures of
    somatoform dissociation, body dissatisfaction and
    self-consciousness (Murray).

22
Possible causes of NDEs
  • REM Intrusion (Nelson)
  • Still have NDES when taking drugs blocking REM
    (Greyson).
  • Cerebral Anoxia Shortage of Oxygen (McHarg)
  • Trying to avoid reality (Pfister)

23
Effects of NDEs
  • Increased Concern for Others
  • Reduced death anxiety
  • Strengthened belief in afterlife
  • Increased self worth


Groth- Marnat and Summers
Different study found higher divorce rate in
those who had a NDE, 65, vs. those who had a
life changing event,19 (Christian).
24
Shared NDEs
  • Examples

A shared NDE but not a shared OBE. How Can We
Explain Shared NDES?
25
Discussion Questions
  • What are the neural correlates that relate OBE to
    NDE?
  • If OBEs are caused by a disruption of neural
    function, does that mean you also have a
    disruption of neural function when you have a
    NDE?
  • Does having a NDE change your normal state of
    consciousness/neural structure?
  • How common are OBEs? Related to drug use?
  • Are NDEs caused by the medications administered
    to the patient?
  • Is NDE real or not? Is just due to being so close
    to death that youre psychologically shocked?
    Or is NDE an actual experience?
  • Are NDEs inherent only to the dying process or do
    they also manifest themselves during
    life-threatening situations?
  • Is there really a core NDE or does it differ
    with demographics, culture, and religion?

26
Terms
  • Out-of-body experience (OBE)
  • Experience of seeing ones own body and the world
    from a location that is outside ones physical
    body (disembodiment). This extracorporeal
    location and visuo-spatial perspective is
    generally experienced as inverted by 180 degrees
    with respect to the subjects actual position.
  • Disembodiment
  • Experience that the self is localized outside
    ones physical body boundaries.
  • Autoscopic hallucination
  • Experience of seeing ones body in extracorporeal
    space (as a double) without disembodiment. The
    double is seen from the habitual egocentric
    visuo-spatial perspective.
  • Heautoscopy
  • Intermediate form between autoscopic
    hallucination and OBE the subject experiences
    seeing his or her body and the world in an
    alternating (or simultaneous) fashion from an
    extracorporeal and his bodily visuo-spatial
    perspective often, it is difficult for the
    subject to decide whether the self is localized
    in the double or in ones own body.

27
Terms (Cont.)
  • Sense of agency
  • The ability to recognize oneself as the agent of
    a behavior or thought.
  • Visual body-part illusions
  • Experience of seeing parts of ones own body
    (generally a limb) as modified in shape,
    position, number, or movement with respect to
    their habitual appearance.
  • Visuo-spatial perspective
  • The point of view and the direction from which
    the subject experiences seeing.
  • Inversion illusion
  • The experience of seeing the world from a
    location and visuo-spatial perspective that is
    inverted by 180 degrees with respect to the
    subjects actual position and perspective. There
    is neither disembodiment nor autoscopy.
  • Room-tilt illusion
  • The experience that the world is inverted by 180
    degrees with respect to the subject, whose
    experienced position and visuo-spatial
    perspective does not change. There is neither
    disembodiment nor autoscopy.

28
Bibliography
  • Lange, R., Greyson, B., Houran J., (2004). A
    Rasch scaling validation of a core near-death
    experience. British Journal of Psychology, 95,
    161177.
  • BLANKE, O., ARZY, S., (2005). The Out-of-Body
    Experience Disturbed Self-Processing at the
    Temporo-Parietal Junction. THE NEUROSCIENTIST,
    ISSN 1073-8584.
  • Arzy, S., Thut, G., Mohr, C., Michel, C.M.,
    Blanke, O., (2006). Neural Basis of Embodiment
    Distinct Contributions of Temporoparietal
    Junction and Extrastriate Body Area. The Journal
    of Neuroscience, 26(31)80748081..
  • Blanke, O., Mohr, C., (2005). Out-of-body
    experience, heautoscopy, and autoscopic
    hallucination of neurological origin Implications
    for neurocognitive mechanisms of corporeal
    awareness and self consciousness. Brain Research
    Reviews 50, 184 199.
  • Lommel, P.V., Wees, R.V., Meyers, V., Elfferich
    I., (2001). Near-death experience in survivors
    of cardiac arrest a prospective study in the
    Netherlands.THE LANCET, 358, 2039-2045
  • Brumblay, RJ. (2003). Hyperdimensional
    Perspectives in Out-of-Body and Near-Death
    Experiences. Journal of near-death studies,
    21(4), 201-221.
  • Murphy, T. (2001). The Structure and Function of
    Near-Death Experiences An Algorithmic
    Reincarnation Hypothesis. Journal of near-death
    studies, 20(2), 101-118.

29
Bibliography (Cont.)
  • Howarth, G. (2001). Shared Near-Death and
    Related Illness Experiences Steps on an
    Unscheduled Journey. Journal of near-death
    studies, 20(2), 71-85.
  • Groth-marnat, G. (1998). Altered Beliefs,
    Attitudes, and Behaviors Following Near-Death
    Experiences. The Journal of humanistic
    psychology, 38(3), 110-125.
  • Greyson, B. (2006). Does the arousal system
    contribute to near death experience?. Neurology,
    67(12), 2265.
  • Nelson, KR. (2006). Does the arousal system
    contribute to near death experience?. Neurology,
    66(7), 1003-1009.
  • Murray, CD. (2006). Differences in body image
    between people reporting near-death and
    spontaneous out-of-body experiences. Journal of
    the Society for Psychical Research, 70(2),
    98-109.
  • Christian, SR. (2006). Marital satisfaction and
    stability following a near-death experience of
    one of the marital partners. (dissertation)
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