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Perceptual and Motor Skills

ISSN 0031-5125

14 papers in the library · 1,378 citations · publishing 1974-2011

Papers

Religious and Mystical Experiences as Artifacts of Temporal Lobe Function: A General Hypothesis

Perceptual and Motor Skills December 1, 1983 Michael A. Persinger 298 citations

Mystical and religious experiences may arise from brief, electrical microseizures in deep temporal lobe structures, particularly the amygdala and hippocampus. The specific brain regions involved shape the content of these experiences, such as out-of-body sensations, distortions of time and space, intense meaningfulness, and dreamlike scenes. While cultural context and personal history influence details, shared temporal lobe properties across humans produce cross-cultural similarities. These experiences exist on a continuum from mild daily highs to intense, recurring religious conversions. Predisposing factors include genetic or biochemical conditions that increase temporal lobe instability. Life crises and near-death situations are common triggers. Because these microseizures activate brain reward regions and reduce death anxiety, they can become learned responses to existential trauma, powerfully shaping human behavior.

Lucid Dreaming Verified by Volitional Communication during Rem Sleep

Perceptual and Motor Skills June 1, 1981 237 citations

Lucid dreaming—dreaming while aware that one is dreaming—was verified in five selected subjects who signaled that they knew they were dreaming while continuing to dream during unambiguous REM sleep. The signals were specific dream actions with observable physical counterparts, performed according to pre-sleep agreement. This signaling ability allows proficient lucid dreamers to conduct dream experiments, marking the exact timing of dream events to enable precise psychophysiological correlations and systematic hypothesis testing.

Lucid Dreaming as a Learnable Skill: A Case Study

Perceptual and Motor Skills December 1, 1980 122 citations

Over three years, a single subject (the author) learned to have lucid dreams—dreams in which the dreamer knows they are dreaming. Without any technique, fewer than one lucid dream occurred per month. Auto-suggestion produced 1 to 13 lucid dreams per month (average 5.4), with at most two per night. A mnemonic technique called MILD yielded 18 to 26 lucid dreams per month (average 21.5), with up to four per night, demonstrating that lucid dreaming can be deliberately induced.

Body Awareness and Yoga Training

Perceptual and Motor Skills December 1, 1994 Nisha Rani, P. V. Krishna Rao 88 citations

People who practice hatha yoga have a greater awareness of normal, nonemotive bodily processes than those who do not. A group of 17 yoga practitioners scored higher on the Body Awareness Questionnaire than a control group of 19 non-practitioners, indicating that yoga training is associated with enhanced body awareness.

Vectorial Cerebral Hemisphericity as Differential Sources for the Sensed Presence, Mystical Experiences and Religious Conversions

Perceptual and Motor Skills June 1, 1993 M. A. Persinger 86 citations

Multiple variants of the sensed presence often precede mystical and religious experiences, which are frequently followed by sudden, permanent changes in self-concept. The model of vectorial hemisphericity proposes that the relative metabolic activity of synaptic patterns between the cerebral hemispheres during transient interhemispheric intercalation determines the affect, content, and type of experience. Depending on the relative activity of the two hemispheres, intrusions of the right hemispheric equivalent of the left hemispheric sense of self generate experimental phenomena including "evil entities," gods, out-of-body experiences, and alterations in space-time. Conditions that facilitate interhemispheric intercalation and the generation of these experiences are discussed.

Visual Sensitivity and Mindfulness Meditation

Perceptual and Motor Skills June 1, 1984 82 citations

After a three-month retreat with 16 hours of daily mindfulness meditation, practitioners showed improved visual sensitivity: they could detect briefer light flashes and distinguish shorter intervals between successive flashes. A control group of retreat staff showed no change. Phenomenological reports suggest mindfulness practice brings normally preattentive visual processes into conscious awareness. These results support Buddhist textual claims about perceptual changes during mindfulness meditation.

Frequency of Lucid Dreaming in a Representative German Sample

Perceptual and Motor Skills February 1, 2011 Michael Schredl, Daniel Erlacher 81 citations

About half (51%) of a representative sample of 919 German adults reported having had at least one lucid dream—a dream in which the person knows they are dreaming. Women recalled lucid dreams significantly more often than men, and lucid dream recall decreased with age. These differences may be explained by overall dream recall frequency, which correlated moderately (r = .57) with lucid dream frequency. Education, marital status, and income showed no relationship with how often people had lucid dreams. The high prevalence suggests that laboratory research on lucid dreams could further understanding of sleep, dreaming, and consciousness.

Techniques for Inducing and Manipulating Lucid Dreams

Perceptual and Motor Skills August 1, 1983 73 citations

Over several years and with over 200 subjects, techniques have been developed for inducing and manipulating lucid dreams. Lucidity can be achieved by practicing a critical-reflective frame of mind, intention and autosuggestion, or using apparatus. Methods to retain lucidity while falling asleep involve concentrating on visual phenomena, the body, or the thinking ego. Intentional acts help induce lucid dreams and manipulate their content. Dreamers can influence dream events within limits, and their desires, emotional state, looks, verbal utterances, and actions are important. Other dream figures can also aid in manipulation.

Extraordinary Experiences during Cross-Modal Perception

Perceptual and Motor Skills December 1, 1976 Kristian Holt‐hansen 51 citations

When nine participants simultaneously tasted beer and listened to a rhythmic sound whose pitch could be varied, certain frequencies produced a reported harmony between taste and sound. At these harmonious pitches, participants described characteristic experiences, including an optimum taste of the beer, rhythmic sensations in the head, and tickling sensations in the jaws and mouth. Three participants also reported experiences resembling those described by people under the influence of drugs such as mescaline, psilocybin, LSD, and cannabis.

Distortions of Vision and Pain: Two Functional Facets of D-Lysergic Acid Diethylamide

Perceptual and Motor Skills December 1, 1979 John Michael Williams 2 citations

LSD produces visual distortions and analgesia. Visual effects likely stem from reduced light-evoked input to the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus from retinal pathways, especially affecting slower or complex-receptive-field afferents. LSD's analgesic effect, accompanied by severe psychotic symptoms, appears to result from actions on a centrifugally controlled pain system involving midbrain raphe neurons.