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Marc Wilson

Victoria University of Wellington

1 paper in the library · 104 citations · publishing 2015

Papers

Neural correlates of mystical experience

Neuropsychologia November 26, 2015 Irène Cristofori, Joseph Bulbulia, John H. Shaver et al. 104 citations

People who suffer damage to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) report markedly more mystical experiences—subjectively believed encounters with a supernatural world—than healthy controls. In a study of 116 Vietnam veterans with penetrating traumatic brain injury and 32 matched controls, lesions to frontal and temporal brain regions, especially the dlPFC and middle/superior temporal cortex, were linked with greater mysticism. Pre-injury data on general intelligence and executive performance rule out individual differences as an explanation. The findings indicate that executive functioning in the dlPFC causally helps down-regulate mystical experiences, supporting earlier speculation that executive brain functions underpin such experiences.