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Tuesday, September 4, 2007 | Science : Psychiatry and Psychology | print version Print | Comments

Document Real Out-of-Body Experiences

by David Biello

Reposted from:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=98A1FC65-E7F2-99DF-3150711A65904907&sc=WR_20070904

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By providing wrong but matching views and feelings, scientists mentally "teleport" people outside their own bodies

Traveling outside your own body is as easy as a video illusion, according to new research. Simply sit in front of two cameras filming your back. Place a special headset over your eyes; it will display the images from the left camera to your left eye and the right camera to your right eye. Then enlist a friend to simultaneously stroke your chest and perform a similar motion just below the cameras' fields of view. Within a minute, you will suddenly be overcome by the strange sensation that you are sitting where the cameras are rather than in your own body.

For a quicker, less powerful jaunt outside your bodily confines, try the double-mirror trick: Position two mirrors facing each other and then lean toward one so that two thirds of your face is reflected in it. Scratch your cheek and stare deep into the hall of mirrors you have created, past your original reflection, past the image of your back, and settle on the third reflection—your own face but slightly obscured. Within seconds, you won't recognize that reflection as you, says neuroscientist Eric Altschuler of the University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey in Newark, who reported the phenomenon in the April issue of Perception.

Admittedly, neither of these illusions precisely match the classic example of the out-of-body experiences reported by patients near death who say they floated out of their bodies but were able to continue observing scenes from above or elsewhere in the room. But two studies published this week in Science show how the self and body can be disconnected, using video cameras.

"We found a method to change the perceived location of the body in space even if that means that one is located outside the physical body," cognitive neuroscientist Henrik Ehrsson of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm says. "They see themselves sitting in the middle of the room, but they feel themselves sitting in a corner of the room."

He tested seven men and 11 women using the headset and camera method. All of the subjects reported feeling whisked across the room when stroked. "I felt as though I was outside my body and looking at myself from the back," one volunteer offered; others spontaneously giggled or otherwise expressed amusement when subjected to the odd effect.


For the rest of the article, go to:
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleID=98A1FC65-E7F2-99DF-3150711A65904907&sc=WR_20070904

Comments 1 - 7 of 7 |

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1. Comment #67794 by 160261621c on September 4, 2007 at 8:36 pm

First post ever, first reply to topic. Been waiting to do that.

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2. Comment #67803 by monkey2 on September 4, 2007 at 9:39 pm

 avatar
Ehrsson threatened the illusory bodies of eight men and four women with a hammer. All of the subjects flinched or winced in alarm and the electrical currents in their skin jumped even though Ehrsson had explicitly promised not to hurt any of them at the beginning of the session.

And from an earlier article

When the rubber hand is whacked with a hammer, people wince and sometimes cry out.

The body exhibits real responses to suggested actions.

The techniques could also be used to put people into the computer-generated virtual avatars either for therapy (as in body-image modification for anorexics) or for enhancing game experiences.

What happens if your avatar is nightmarishly beaten by a crosier brandishing virtual bishop?

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3. Comment #67818 by Richard Morgan on September 5, 2007 at 12:08 am

In 1977 I had an N.D.E. and the usual out-of-body experience.
Today, thirty years later, I am still amused by one aspect of all this. I am short-sighted so I wear glasses. I have always seen my image in the mirror as a glasses-wearer, so whenever I imagine my face, I see it wearing glasses.
I had my "out-of-body" experience as I was being trundled from the ambulance into the hospital, and as I looked down on myself, I "saw" my face... without glasses, as they had been removed!
Today all that has been adequately explained by the neuro-sciences, but back then it pushed me even deeper into woo-woo world!

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4. Comment #67823 by GBile on September 5, 2007 at 12:28 am

Do we know why we, normally, have an 'in-body' experience ?

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5. Comment #67880 by aitchkay on September 5, 2007 at 4:09 am

 avatarGBile asked:
Do we know why we, normally, have an 'in-body' experience?
I think it's because our sense organs (our eyes in particular) are in our body.

It seems to me that the normal in-body-experience helps explain why virtually all human cultures have the notion of a soul, or spirit, which inhabits the body. It is likely that some ancient humans had out-of-body experiences (induced by near-death experiences or drugs), and I think this helps explain the belief that the soul or spirit can leave, and survive, the body. It also helps explain the belief that some other spirit can enter someone's body and influence them*. Given these beliefs, questions such as "where does the soul come from?" and "where does the soul go when the body dies?" seem inevitable, as does the construction of a supernatural belief system to explain these things.

*I am reminded of Vivian Stanshall's Sir Henry:

Henry, now refuelled with several great gulps of Southampton Red Rum (a brain-storming cocktail involving a large port, vodka, rum and horseradish sauce) continued.
HENRY : These are the only spirits I want tormenting my body.

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6. Comment #68312 by savroD on September 6, 2007 at 7:23 pm

 avatarI just have to weigh in on this one.....
I'll never forget my first out-of-body experience. It was vivid and somewhat ironic in that I was an Atheist back then.
I was sitting in my dorm room. My roommate was asleep. I was sucking the smoke out from an overturned glass I had used to stop the burning of a most exquisite piece of Hashish said to hail from Afghanistan. As my lungs expanded, I leaned back in my seat and closed my eyes. I suddenly had the distinct impression that my awareness had launched out of my body like a rocket and into the space above the earth at incredible speed. I captured only a mere glimpse of the earth and flashed back into my body.
If I learned anything, my analysis of this experience was that it wasn't in the least bit supernatural.

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7. Comment #68407 by Mat on September 7, 2007 at 5:06 am

I had an out-of-body experience recently. I played squash for the first time in quite a long time, and received a comprehensive, no-holds-barred thrashing. This was very unusual - back in my 20s my body had been very good at squash, as had I. It took me quite a while to realise why I'd been so devastatingly humbled - I was in somebody else's body, not my own! So I'd like to send a quick message to the person who's body I was in - you really ought to look after it a bit better, you know. It was crap: no stamina; no speed; aching knees; wheezing lungs; terrible hand-eye coordination. Appalling. I shall be using my own body from now on.

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