Neural filters to conscious awareness and the phenomena that reduce their impact.

International review of psychiatry (Abingdon, England)  – January 01, 2025

Source: PubMed

Summary

What if our everyday reality is just a sliver of what's possible? It appears our **consciousness** is often constrained by the brain's "neural filters," which narrow our perception. Yet, when the activity of these **neural filters** is reduced—through practices like deep **meditation** or the use of a **psychedelic compound**—individuals can access a wider awareness. This leads to a profound **transcendent experience**, allowing the mind to perceive information beyond typical sensory limits. Such states suggest a vast, untapped potential for human awareness.

Abstract

In this review, we examine studies suggesting that conscious or mental awareness is constrained by our neural filters. These filters include sensory receptors, the ascending reticular activating system and the thalamus, the default mode network, and left hemisphere language centers. These filters limit our perception of the world to a narrow range of energy frequencies, make sense of space and time, and prioritize internally generated narratives (associated with language and conceptuality). We then present studies indicating that when the activity within these filters is reduced or absent-such as in near-death experiences, deep meditation, or the use of psychedelic compounds-we may gain access to a wider awareness, experience transcendence of time and space, and ego dissolution. This expanded state might enable the mind to potentially access intuitive, nonlocal information beyond the limitations of the five senses.

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