'God spot' researchers see the light in MRI study 

Ian Sample, science correspondent
Wednesday August 30, 2006
The Guardian 


Brain scans of nuns have revealed intricate neural circuits that 
flicker into life when they feel the presence of God.
The images suggest that feelings of profound joy and union with a 
higher being that accompany religious experiences are the 
culmination of ramped-up electrical activity in parts of the brain.

The scans were taken as nuns relived intense religious experiences. 
They showed a surge in neural activity in regions of the brain that 
govern feelings of peace, happiness and self-awareness. 
Psychologists at the University of Montreal say the research, which 
appears in the journal Neuroscience Letters, was not intended to 
confirm or deny the existence of God, but set out to examine how the 
brain behaves during profound religious experiences.

Mario Beauregard and Vincent Paquette used functional magnetic 
resonance imaging to scan the brains of 15 Carmelite nuns who were 
asked to remember the most intense mystical experience they had ever 
had.

When the scans were compared with others taken beforehand, the 
scientists found electrical activity and blood oxygen levels had 
surged in at least 12 regions of the brain. Some regions, such as 
the medial orbitofrontal cortex, are strongly associated with 
emotions, while activity in the right middle temporal cortex is 
believed to be responsible for the impression of contacting a 
spiritual entity. The scans showed different brain activity from 
those taken when the nuns were asked to remember intense emotional 
experiences that involved another person.

The findings contradict previous suggestions that human brains may 
have evolved with a "God spot" - a single region that lights up in 
response to deeply religious thoughts. "Rather than there being one 
spot that relates to mystical experiences, we've found a number of 
brain regions are involved," said Dr Beauregard.








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