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Eamonn Walsh

Cultural and Social Neuroscience Research Group, Forensic and Neurodevelopmental Sciences, Kings College London, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK.

2 papers in the library · 123 citations · publishing 2013-2014

Papers

Modelling psychiatric and cultural possession phenomena with suggestion and fMRI.

Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior April 1, 2014 Quinton Deeley, David A Oakley, Eamonn Walsh et al. 75 citations

Involuntary movements in neuropsychiatric disorders and culturally influenced dissociative states, such as delusions of alien control and spirit possession, involve distinct brain processes. Using fMRI in 15 highly hypnotically susceptible volunteers, suggestions modelled different experiences of loss of self-control: external personal control (like delusions of control), internal personal control (like spirit possession), and impersonal control by a machine (technical delusions). Brain activity and connectivity varied across these conditions.

Using hypnotic suggestion to model loss of control and awareness of movements: an exploratory FMRI study.

PloS one January 1, 2013 Quinton Deeley, Eamonn Walsh, David A Oakley et al. 48 citations

Voluntary control and awareness of movement are central to selfhood and responsibility, yet can be lost in neuropsychiatric syndromes and dissociative states like spirit possession. Using suggestion and fMRI in 15 highly hypnotically suggestible subjects, loss of perceived control of movements was linked to reduced connectivity between the supplementary motor area (SMA) and motor regions. Reduced awareness of involuntary movements corresponded with less activation in parietal cortices and insula. These results suggest the sense of voluntary control may critically depend on SMA coupling with motor systems, offering a neural basis for narrowed awareness in pathological and culturally influenced dissociative phenomena.