Arts and Culture

Scientists might have found the part of the brain responsible for spirituality

Revellers perform yoga as they celebrate the summer solstice on Salisbury Plain in southern England June 21, 2014. Stonehenge is a celebrated venue of festivities during the summer solstice - the longest day of the year in the northern hemisphere - and it attracts thousands of revellers, spiritualists and tourists. Druids, a pagan religious order dating back to Celtic Britain, believe Stonehenge was a centre of spiritualism more than 2,000 years ago. REUTERS/Kieran Doherty (BRITAIN - Tags: SOCIETY ENVIRONMENT)

An understanding of the origin of spiritual experiences within the brain could have useful applications elsewhere in medicine. Image: REUTERS/Kieran Doherty

Bill Hathaway
Public Affairs Officer, Yale University
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Scientists have identified a possible neurobiological home for the spiritual experience—the sense of connection to something greater than oneself.

Activity in the parietal cortex, an area of the brain involved in awareness of self and others as well as attention processing, seems to be a common element among individuals who have experienced a variety of spiritual experiences, according to a study in the journal Cerebral Cortex.

“Spiritual experiences are robust states that may have profound impacts on people’s lives,” says Marc Potenza, professor of psychiatry, of the Yale Child Study Center, and of neuroscience.

“Understanding the neural bases of spiritual experiences may help us better understand their roles in resilience and recovery from mental health and addictive disorders,” he says.

Spiritual experiences can be religious in nature or not, such as a feeling of oneness in nature or the absence of self during sporting events.

Researchers interviewed 27 young adults to gather information about past stressful and relaxing experiences as well as their spiritual experiences. The subjects then underwent fMRI scans while listening for the first time to recordings based on their personalized experiences.

While individual experiences differed, researchers noted similar patterns of activity in the parietal cortex as the subjects imagined experiencing the events in the recordings.

Potenza stresses other brain areas are probably also involved in formation of spiritual experiences. The method can help future researchers study spiritual experience and its impact on mental health, he says.

Lisa Miller of Columbia University is first author of the study.

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Arts and CultureBehavioural Sciences
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