Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
February 1, 2013
Etzel Cardeña, Peter Jönsson, Devin B Terhune et al.
151 citations
After a hypnotic induction, people who are highly or moderately hypnotizable often report spontaneous changes in consciousness, but few studies have controlled for the demands of specific suggestions or examined the brain activity underlying these experiences. In a neurophenomenological study of 37 individuals with high, medium, and low hypnotizability, participants reported their depth and spontaneous experiences at baseline, after induction, and after rest periods, while EEG measured brain activity. Perceived hypnotic depth increased substantially after induction, especially among highly and moderately hypnotizable individuals, but remained almost unchanged among those low in hypnotizability.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
December 1, 2019
S. Seghezzi, Gianluigi Giannini, L. Zapparoli
95 citations
Self-consciousness includes two distinct experiences: the sense of ownership of one's body and the sense of agency over one's actions. Different neurocognitive models describe their relationship. An additive model proposes that agency requires ownership; an independence hypothesis argues they rely on separate brain systems. An interactive model suggests they are interdependent, with both unique and overlapping neural correlates. A quantitative meta-analysis of neurofunctional studies identified a body-ownership-specific network (left inferior parietal lobule, left extra-striate body area), a sense-of-agency-specific network (left SMA, left posterior insula, right postcentral gyrus, right superior temporal lobe), and a shared network in the...
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.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
September 1, 2022
Clara Alameda, Daniel Sanabria, Luis F Ciria
69 citations
A systematic review of 25 studies involving 471 participants examined the neural correlates of flow—the subjective experience of automatic, effortless, and intrinsically rewarding task performance. Studies using EEG, fMRI, fNIRS, or tDCS converge on the involvement of anterior brain regions linked to attention, executive function, and reward, such as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, medial prefrontal cortex, and inferior frontal gyrus. However, the dynamics of these regions during flow are inconsistent across studies. The evidence is sparse and inconclusive, limiting theoretical debate. Major limitations include a small number of studies, high heterogeneity, and methodological constraints.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
September 1, 2023
Jianghao Liu, Paolo Bartolomeo
68 citations
People with aphantasia, who report absent or nearly absent visual imagery, perform as accurately as typical and unusually vivid imagers on tasks involving object shape, color, written words, faces, and spatial relationships. However, they respond more slowly on both imagery and perceptual tasks, and they report lower confidence in their perceptual judgments. Across all participants, higher vividness of imagery correlates with faster response times. The findings suggest that congenital aphantasia involves slower visual information processing in both imagery and perception, but the precision of that processing is unaffected. This pattern supports the idea that aphantasia may stem from a deficit in phenomenal consciousness or the use of alternative non-visual strategies.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
September 1, 2021
Santiago Alcaide, Jacobo Sitt, Tomoyasu Horikawa et al.
13 citations
Waking up from early sleep involves a two-stage brain process. First, subcortical and sensorimotor structures activate before most cortical regions, followed by rapid whole-brain activation, with frontal regions engaging slightly later. A second, slower stage may then occur, where cortical regions activate before subcortical structures and the cerebellum. This pattern suggests subcortical structures play a key role in initiating and maintaining conscious states.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
November 1, 2019
Jean-Paul Noel, Nathan Faivre, Elisa Magosso et al.
6 citations
Artificial neural networks built with feedback connections from multisensory to unisensory cortices, consistent with all-or-none models of conscious access, produced intermediate reaction times when multisensory stimuli were associated with unisensory feedback. In psychophysical testing with 29 subjects completing 10 hours of a multisensory cue-congruency task, reaction times to multisensory cues reported as unisensory fell between those of fully aware and fully unaware cues. These results suggest that graded forms of phenomenal consciousness can arise from neural networks that follow all-or-none principles.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
December 1, 2023
Patrick Mcnamara
5 citations
Grafman and colleagues' research shows that religious beliefs and behaviors are mediated by standard social cognitive networks in the brain, but their work also points beyond treating religious cognition as merely a type of general social cognition. Data from experiments targeting mystical states and reports of encounters with supernatural agents during controlled psychedelic experiments suggest that brain mediation of such experiences involves both disruption or downregulation of social cognitive networks and activation of an additional, partially identified neural process. This indicates that a full neuroscience account of religious beliefs, behaviors, and experiences must extend beyond treating religion as an ordinary social process.
Cortex; a journal devoted to the study of the nervous system and behavior
October 1, 2025
Roger Koenig-Robert, Rebecca Keogh, Joel Pearson
3 citations
As psychedelic therapy becomes more widely legalized, a note of warning is raised about recent reports that people with aphantasia—those lacking a mind's eye—have acquired visual mental imagery after using psychedelics. While gaining or increasing visual imagery may seem appealing, strong mental imagery is linked to several mental health conditions. The potential impact of switching on visual imagery in aphantasics or increasing its strength in neurotypical individuals remains unknown. The authors advocate for greater awareness of these risks and their ethical implications, especially concerning informed consent.