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      Neural correlates of religious experience.

      The European Journal of Neuroscience
      Adult, Brain, physiology, radionuclide imaging, Brain Mapping, Female, Frontal Lobe, Humans, Male, Parietal Lobe, Religion, Tomography, Emission-Computed

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          Abstract

          The commonsense view of religious experience is that it is a preconceptual, immediate affective event. Work in philosophy and psychology, however, suggest that religious experience is an attributional cognitive phenomenon. Here the neural correlates of a religious experience are investigated using functional neuroimaging. During religious recitation, self-identified religious subjects activated a frontal-parietal circuit, composed of the dorsolateral prefrontal, dorsomedial frontal and medial parietal cortex. Prior studies indicate that these areas play a profound role in sustaining reflexive evaluation of thought. Thus, religious experience may be a cognitive process which, nonetheless, feels immediate.

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          Journal
          11328359
          10.1046/j.0953-816x.2001.01527.x

          Chemistry
          Adult,Brain,physiology,radionuclide imaging,Brain Mapping,Female,Frontal Lobe,Humans,Male,Parietal Lobe,Religion,Tomography, Emission-Computed

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