Anesthesiology
September 30, 2010
Pierre Boveroux, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse, Marie‐Aurélie Bruno et al.
645 citations
Propofol-induced unconsciousness is linked to decreased connectivity within frontoparietal networks (the default-mode and executive-control networks) and between the thalamus and these networks, with a negative correlation between thalamic and cortical activity emerging during unconsciousness. In contrast, connectivity in low-level sensory cortices (auditory and visual networks) is preserved, including their thalamocortical connections. Loss of consciousness is associated with a breakdown of cross-modal interactions between visual and auditory networks. These findings suggest that unconsciousness results from disrupted communication between sensory and higher-order frontoparietal cortices, preventing conscious perception.
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
June 1, 2010
Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse, Athena Demertzi, Manuel Schabus et al.
460 citations
Resting brain activity reveals two anticorrelated cortical systems linked to conscious awareness: an extrinsic system (lateral fronto-parietal areas) associated with external awareness and an intrinsic system (medial brain areas) associated with internal awareness. In 31 healthy volunteers, external and internal awareness were significantly anticorrelated, with a mean switching frequency of 0.05 Hz, similar to BOLD fMRI slow oscillations. In 22 volunteers, fMRI showed that precuneus/posterior cingulate, anterior cingulate/mesiofrontal cortices, and parahippocampal areas (intrinsic system) correlated with internal awareness, while lateral fronto-parietal cortices (extrinsic system) correlated with external awareness.
Biological Psychiatry Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging
July 17, 2023
Flora Moujaes, Nathalie M. Rieser, Christophe Phillips et al.
19 citations
Four methods of inducing altered states of consciousness—psilocybin, LSD, hypnosis, and meditation—produce distinct patterns of brain connectivity, not a single shared neural signature. Pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions showed connectivity patterns that could predict which method a person had used. Hypnosis and meditation differed from each other and from the drugs. Psilocybin and LSD did not differ in brain connectivity but showed different relationships between brain activity and behavior. The findings clarify how each method works in the brain and suggest they may offer different therapeutic avenues for psychiatric disorders.