SCIENTISTS SEEK RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE – IN SUBJECTS' BRAINS

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SCIENTISTS SEEK RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE – IN SUBJECTS' BRAINS
By GEOFFREY MOHAN Los Angeles Times

January 7, 2015
  • Can the same basic brain circuitry produce Mother Teresa and 9/11 hijacker Mohamed Atta?
  • A growing number of scientists are aiming their most sophisticated machinery at religious cognition
  • Neuroscientists hope to find out how believers' brains experience religious moments

At the push of a button, the gurney holding Auriel Peterson slides slowly into the pale blue glow of a magnetic resonance imaging machine. Soon, all that's visible are the shins of her black track pants and the chartreuse-and-white soles of her running shoes, angled like the fins of a torpedo.

Behind a window in an adjacent room, a splayed-out cauliflower pattern appears on a computer screen in black and white. It's Peterson's brain. And it's probably the last thing about this exercise that will be so simply shaded.

From Peterson's perspective, the next hour will be spent in service, like the day she packed donated eyeglasses to send to Zimbabwe. But the ardent Mormon also knows she could be adding to a centuries-old debate about God and science.

So she says a silent prayer: "I hope they get what they need."

::


Scientists at the University of Utah seek religious experience - in their subjects' brains.


Other animals have hierarchies, organized behaviors, even a semblance of norms. Only humans have religion and science. And the two have seldom been on civil terms.

Jeff Anderson and Julie Korenberg, neuroscientists at the University of Utah, want to change that. They're among a growing number of scientists aiming their field's most sophisticated machinery at religious cognition.

"It amazes me how one of the most profound influences on human behavior is virtually completely unstudied," Anderson said. "We think about how much this drives people's behavior, and yet we don't know the first thing about where in the brain that's even registered."

The researchers want to see more than religion's registry on the brain. They want to know whether it differs across sects, or by intensity of belief. They want to see what genes it activates, what hormones it releases, and how it relates to social behaviors. Can the same basic circuitry produce Mother Teresa and the Sept. 11 hijacker Mohamed Atta? If so, how?

To approach even speculative answers to such questions, the researchers have to capture what goes on in the brain of a believer during a religious moment.

Right now, that depends on whether a maw of helium-cooled superconducting magnets can become Auriel Peterson's personal church.

The 26-year-old community college student lies still, clears her mind. The machine whirs and clicks, taking rapid-fire snapshots of the flux of blood to billions of neurons.

"I want you to spend the next six or seven minutes in quiet prayer," Anderson says into a microphone.

Anderson's team has rigged a video screen above Peterson's face, and placed a set of switches at her fingertips so she can convey how intense her religious feelings are when she sees quotes from Scripture or the Book of Mormon or images of religious figures.

She is the fifth subject to be scanned, and the research team hopes to record 15 others before sorting through the data for something of significance to science.

And, maybe, to religion: Peterson wants to see how the spirit manifests on her brain too. So do a lot of other Mormons, apparently.

"Within a week of announcing that we were going to do this project, we had over a hundred volunteers," Anderson said.

That surprised Anderson's team. Expecting controversy, last year they held a public meeting about the project. Reaction was at times fractious, but mostly polite. So far, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has taken no position on whether its members should participate.

"I think some people worry that we're biologizing the religious response … that that will demystify it or make it somehow less important," said Anderson, who was raised Mormon but left the church a decade ago.

There are plenty who would relish any data that support the idea that God is all in the mind. But Korenberg and Anderson aren't looking for how people come to believe in a supernatural being. They want to know what happens once they do believe.

"I think we're trying to do something much more simple, and that is look at private religious practice," said Korenberg, who is Jewish, was raised in a Catholic neighborhood in Natick, Mass., and sings in a Christian chorale. "I think that what we're expecting to find here is that Mormons aren't really going to be that different from Jews or Muslims."

Until now, Korenberg and Anderson have done what medical researchers do — studied abnormalities. She has spent 15 years investigating the neurochemical and genetic roots of Williams syndrome, an obscure brain abnormality somewhat like the inverse of autism; it causes people to become hypersocial but befuddled by simple objects. They have extreme emotional reactions to music, akin to religious ecstasy.

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Auriel Peterson prepares to go into a magnetic resonance imaging machine at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. (Geoffrey Mohan / Los Angeles Times)

Anderson, for his part, scanned the brains of people with autism, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis. But he thought a lot about religion's hold on the mind, and when he had the chance to scan Zen Buddhist monks a few years ago, he jumped. And he realized he had been overlooking a ready-made sample right in front of him: Mormons.

"They have thousands of hours of practice doing exactly the one thing that we're interested in, which is identifying when they are feeling spiritual influences," Anderson said. "And there also is a really generous tradition of participation in science and contribution, voluntarism, that makes for a really nice study design and a focused group."

Other scientists who started from similar premises have strayed into metaphysics. Neuroscientist Andrew Newberg began by scanning the brains of Franciscan nuns and Tibetan Buddhists and wound up founding "neurotheology," which fuses science with mysticism. Newberg has co-written a series of bestselling books on the topic, including "Why God Won't Go Away."

"There's still value in doing those studies, even if the study doesn't answer the big question — does God exist," said Newberg, now the research director of the Myrna Brind Center of Integrative Medicine at Thomas Jefferson University and Hospital in Philadelphia. "We still learn about the brain; we still learn about the nature of spiritual experiences and practices. And those have practical implications."

Neuroscientist Mario Beauregard of the University of Arizona is writing a book criticizing the scientific belief that there eventually will be a material explanation for everything. His work helped disprove earlier studies that purported to find a "God spot" in the brain.

"There really is no such thing," said Michael Inzlicht, a psychologist at the University of Toronto who also has studied religion's effect on the brain. "Thinking of God could maybe activate certain spots of the brain, but they weren't evolved for that purpose. They have evolved for some other reason and have been co-opted for religious cognition."

Most neuroscientists have long since abandoned any search for a "God spot," and settled on delving deeper into networks involving attention, salience, self-reflection, emotion and other functions.

Anderson and Korenberg are curious about chemicals produced or released by brain activity. Oxytocin, a hormone produced in the hypothalamus, has been associated with intimacy, fidelity and bonding, but also with social bias.

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Jeff Anderson, left, and Michael Reading look over images of Auriel Peterson’s brain function. (Geoffrey Mohan / Los Angeles Times)
Peterson has been in the scanner for more than an hour when they slide the gurney out. She stirs, and asks for tissues. Tears streak her face.

Two assistants draw blood to test for levels of oxytocin and other chemicals and rush down the hall to put it in a centrifuge, then pack the samples on dry ice before such chemicals degrade. Then they lead Peterson to a meeting room for debriefing.

With pen and paper, she charts her emotional responses to each of the prompts. Then she checks off descriptions that fit her feelings, from a lexicon familiar to any Mormon — promptings, warnings, burning in the bosom, alignment of heart and mind, pure intelligence.

"I don't have to pick one, right?" she says. "Good. There were so many."

Although she describes herself as "young in spirituality," Peterson, a third-generation Mormon, said she had ample practice at priming her mind for a spiritual state. The MRI machine wasn't much of an obstacle.

"I just had to tune out the noise," she says. "I just tried to remember people and experiences."

Some religious passages reminded her of people she had met on her mission, of elders, or of her father, an attorney in Fresno who emailed the ad for the Utah project and suggested she try it. Like him, Peterson was skeptical that science would show them much they did not already know about their spiritual life. But it was worth a try.

Peterson has trouble explaining what a religious moment is like. "It's one of those things you have to experience," she tells them. "It's like witnessing a baby being born. Until you see it, you really don't get it."

Then she and the scientists exchange thank-yous. They walk out into the twilight, alone again with their own questions.

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Auriel Peterson's brain appears onscreen while she tries to convey the intensity of her feelings as she's exposed to religious quotes and images. (Geoffrey Mohan / Los Angeles Times)

geoffrey.mohan@latimes.com

Twitter: @LATsciguy

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times
 
人体辉光 zt

人体会发光,你相信吗?  

前不久,美国学者在一家照相馆利用一种高科技微光检测仪对一些拍摄订婚照、结婚照的男女进行观测,发现情侣手挽手拍照时,女性指尖上的光晕特别亮,并向男方指尖延伸过去;而男子的指尖光晕却会略微后缩以顺应女性的光圈。

当情侣真情拥抱接吻时,彼此的辉光奇妙地交织在一起,并变得分外明亮。

b90e7bec54e736d1d11b3a2e9b504fc2d5626988.jpg
95eef01f3a292df5f4ce1a33bc315c6034a87382.jpg
f9dcd100baa1cd1130bac406b912c8fcc3ce2d83.jpg


  人体会发光,这一现象在二十世纪逐渐引起众多科学家的注意,并相继对“人体辉光”现象作了探索和研究,目前,各国科学家正试图将对“人体光”的研究应用到健康保健、疾病治疗、体育竞技、刑事侦查等众多领域。

  人体辉光 七彩瑰丽

  其实,很早以前,科学工作者们就发现有些人的皮肤是会发光的。1696年,丹麦名医和解剖学家巴尔宁就报道过一个意大利妇女的身上会发光。著名英国科学家席利斯特里在他的著作《光学史》里,也记载过一个患甲状腺病的人身上的汗腺会发光。那个人在剧烈的体力劳动之后,皮肤发光特别强烈,在黑暗中,他的衬衣好象被火焰笼罩着似的。


  1911年的一个晚上,英国伦敦一家医院的理疗室里漆黑一片。一位叫基尔纳的医生正透过双花青素染料刷过的玻璃屏观察病人的治疗情况。突然,一个奇怪的现象出现在基尔纳眼前:一名裸体病人的体表出现了15毫米厚的模糊光圈。这个模糊光圈色彩瑰丽,忽隐忽现,使人感到神秘莫测。后来,基尔纳又多次看到了这种情景,于是他宣称:人体能放射出类似月晕和日晕的光圈,并把它命名为“人体辉光”。

  以后,美国著名神经生理学家托尼安模拟了这所理疗室的实际环境,成功地将这种光晕拍摄成了照片。这一发现轰动一时,许多科学家对此进行研究,证明人、动物、植物等各种生物只有在活着的时候,身体才能发射出这种超微弱光。

3801213fb80e7bec021a1fef2f2eb9389a506bff.jpg


  20世纪40年代,苏联科学家基利安夫妇在一次电学实验中,惊奇地发现人体的各部位发出的光有不同的颜色:手臂是蓝色,心脏是深蓝,而臀部是绿色。更有趣的是,人体相对发光比较明显的一些部位,恰好与古代中国人发现的700多个穴位相对应。在拍摄饮用烈性酒的人的手指时,他们发现,随着不断饮酒,饮酒人的手周围的光晕会变得越来越亮,颜色逐渐接近玫瑰色。而当饮酒人喝醉时,手指头所发出的光就会变得模糊,并失去正常色彩。

  科学家们还发现,人体在高频电场的环境下,可以闪烁生辉。前苏联科学家柯利尔用高频电场照相术,已把笼罩在一些人身体周围的彩色辉光拍摄下来。这种辉光十分奇妙:它能随人的部位、情绪改变颜色。人在发怒时,辉光颜色会加深且转为红色,恐慌时则转为蓝白色,醉酒时又会变成苍白色。更奇妙的是,这些有辉光的人在男女指尖接触时,女人指尖的辉光会向前伸展,而男人指尖的辉光却向后退缩。

  人体冷光 幽蓝黯淡

  近些年,科学家利用专门的仪器对不同年龄、性别、职业和健康状况的人进行了数万次测试,结果无一例外地测出了每个人体表的每个部位都在发出极其微弱的可见光。这种光不是红外线,也和人的体温无关,而是一种蓝色的类似萤火虫发出的超微弱冷光。科学家的研究还证实,每个人自呱呱坠地直至离开人世,始终都在发射这种冷光。有趣的是,人体体表各部位发出的冷光强弱不同。比如,手指尖发出的光比虎口强,虎口发出的光又比手心强。伴随人的年龄增长和健康状况的变化,以及饥饿、睡眠等生理变化,冷光也会发生相应的改变。一般来说,不同机体有不同的发光强度。身体愈强壮的人,发光愈强;体力劳动者或喜好运动的人比脑力劳动者发出的光强;青壮年发光强度比老年人强一倍多。更值得一提的是,人体有经穴的地方,比没有经穴的地方发光强度要大。

  那么,人体发出的极其微弱的冷光到底有多么微弱呢?就好比我们在黑夜里点亮一只1瓦的小电灯,而你是在距离其大约200公里的地方看它。

  人体发光 细胞和电磁场有功

  科学家们研究发现,人体能发出两种光,一种是辉光,另一种是冷光。在20世纪末至21世纪初,世界各国的科学家利用高新技术对“人体光”现象进行了深入研究,逐渐揭示了“人体光”的秘密。

  究竟是什么原因导致人体发出冷光和辉光呢?

  现在科学家认为,人体散发冷光,很可能是由于人体内藏有发光细胞的缘故。最近,安徽医科大学的课题小组经多年研究,初步揭示了“人体光”的奥秘。他们创立了对人体众多细胞的化学发光测定方法,并研究了这种发光现象的内在原因。根据大量实验结果证实:人的细胞能够发光,并可以被仪器所接收;人体细胞发光是细胞活性氧自由基在细胞中运动的结果,它体现了细胞的氧化功能和活性,因此人的细胞发光的强弱与人体的健康状况有很大关系。

  人体又为什么能散发出辉光呢?现在的科学家认为,“人体辉光”很可能是人体发出的二次辐射与空气电离产生的荧光现象。因为温度处于绝对零度以上的物体,均能发射辐射波,只不过这种辐射波极其微弱,并且它们的波长不能被肉眼识别而已。人当然也会产生辐射波。人在发出辐射波的同时也在接受包括来自宇宙空间的可见光、紫外线,以及来自地球本身的X射线等辐射。

  研究发现,人、动物、植物等有机物,甚至矿物、岩石等无机物,都有一个固定的能量吸收带,该吸收带一旦在比较特殊的电磁场里受到电磁能量的激发,就会产生比原来所吸收的辐射波波长更长的二次辐射。这种二次辐射的辐射波能使空气发生电离现象,形成有色离子,大量有色离子的汇聚就会发出可见光。也正因为如此,“人体辉光”的发出需要比较特殊的环境和苛刻的条件,在一般的情况下,人们很难看到“人体辉光”。

  晕光异常 疾病上身

  科学家对人体光的研究成果如今已经可以帮助医生诊断疾病了。如果你感觉身体不太舒服,但又无法具体说出哪里不舒服,那么,就请你让医生用人体辉光探测仪为你“看光”。如果你的辉光有些灰暗,辉光照片中显示出一种仿佛受云雾干扰的模糊“日冕”图像,那你或许是患上了慢性疾病。具体是患上了什么疾病,医生接着会用人体冷光探测仪为你细致“看光”,看你经络系统的光亮度,以及哪个经络的穴位色彩变暗或发黑。然后,医生综合你的辉光、冷光发出的信号,就可以断定你的疾病所在了。

  为什么通过人体光可以探知人体的疾病呢?

  科学家研究发现,人体光晕的分布有一定的规律。就同一人而言,一般手指尖的光最强,臂、腿和躯干较弱。上肢发光又往往比下肢强。人体的不同部位虽然紧密相邻,但它们发的光强度竟可相差一倍、两倍,甚至十几倍。同一个部位,发光强度始终维持在某一发光水平,直到生命状态发生了特殊变化。

  体表发光与人的生理状态及体内器官有着内在联系。试验证明,人体在某些疾病发生之前,身体会显示出一种干扰的“日冕”。此外,癌细胞生长也会放出一种奇异的晕光。精神病人、酗酒者和吸烟者手指上有时出现光晕缺口。

  科学家在研究中发现,人体所发出的微弱光,对医学上临床诊断作用非浅。健康人的体表左右两侧相应部位的超微弱光的强度是一一对称的,即处于平衡状态;而不同的疾病患者会出现一个至几个和疾病相关的、特有的发光不对称点,称为病理发光信息点。这些有特殊诊断意义的病理发光信息往往出现在经穴上,它与左右两侧的发光强度相差约一倍。

  如此一来,客观地测量被检查者体表各个发光信息点的发光是否左右对称,医生就可诊断他有没有病。再根据这发光不对称信息点,即病理发光信息点出现的部位,可以分析得了什么病。例如,肾炎患者,他的发光不对称点出现在脚心涌泉穴的部位;肝病患者的病理发光信息点往往出现在足趾的大敦穴上或是在足窍阴穴上。病情愈重,病理发光信息点上发光不对称状态愈显著;如果经治疗病情好转,这种不对称状态又会向对称状态转化。

  圣彼得堡军医大学运用这一技术对手术前和手术后的250名病人进行了全面检查,医生发现,生物能场对机体紧张程度和手术情况都有反应。科罗特科夫教授相信,过不了多久,世界上将会出现一些建立在计算机系统上对身体进行长期检查和监控的系统。走近仪器,把手放在上面。如果参数未出现异常,那就尽管放心。如果参数出现异常,就得上医院做一次仔细检查了。

  仪器捕捉人体光芒

  据俄罗斯《总结》杂志报道,俄罗斯圣彼得堡国立信息技术大学教授科罗特科夫多年来一直致力于发明一种专门的仪器来记录“人体光”,他终于研制出了一种被称为气体放电视觉显形暗箱的仪器。这种暗箱的工作原理相当简单,只需往人的手指发送短促的电脉冲。电脉冲激活了光子和电子流,仪器对它们进行捕捉,然后在电脑显示器上形成图像。人的手是非常敏感的器官,手指上有不少区域跟人体的各个系统都有联系。专家们的任务则是解读图像,说出光跟人体各具体部位机能的关系。一个人如果精力充沛,身体健康,他发出的光明亮而均匀。如果发出暗淡而不连贯的光就是身体有炎症的信号。

  罪犯作案 人体光侦破

  有关生物能场的知识可用来查找犯罪分子。因为一个人如果打算犯罪,他一定会处在高度紧张之中。这种从外表看不出的紧张,从生理上一定会有反应,这样一来科学家们发明的人体光记录仪器便派上了用场。圣彼得堡建市300周年庆典举行之前,入城口的交通警岗都安装了这种仪器,3天内就查出了37人处在高度紧张状态,其中9人后来查出为违法者(一个在运送毒品,一个在运送枪支,还有一个是通缉犯等)。美国纽约的肯尼迪机场也开始试用这种仪器。

  如果你是一名刑警,眼下正在侦破一个凶杀大案,已经圈定了4个犯罪嫌疑人,如果要进一步确认重点犯罪嫌疑人,那么,你就先让嫌疑人分别站在人体辉光探测仪前面,并向他们提出各种各样的问题,让他们回答。如果其中一个嫌疑人在回答问题的过程中,辉光图像中连续出现了闪耀跳动而且色彩不同的光点,那他可能是重点嫌疑人,因为他说谎了。


Strange! Humans Glow in Visible Light

by Charles Q. Choi,

090722-body-glow-02.jpg

Schematic illustration of experimental setup that found the human body, especially the face, emits visible light in small quantities that vary during the day. B is one fo the test subjects. The other images show the weak emissions of visible light during totally dark conditions. The chart corresponds to the images and shows how the emissions varied during the day. The last image (I) is an infrared image of the subject showing heat emissions.
Credit: Kyoto University; Tohoku Institute of Technology; PLoS ONE free radicals.

The human body literally glows, emitting a visible light in extremely small quantities at levels that rise and fall with the day, scientists now reveal.

Past research has shown that the body emits visible light, 1,000 times less intense than the levels to which our naked eyes are sensitive. In fact, virtually all living creatures emit very weak light, which is thought to be a byproduct of biochemical reactions involving free radicals.

(This visible light differs from the infrared radiation — an invisible form of light — that comes from body heat.)

To learn more about this faint visible light, scientists in Japan employed extraordinarily sensitive cameras capable of detecting single photons. Five healthy male volunteers in their 20s were placed bare-chested in front of the cameras in complete darkness in light-tight rooms for 20 minutes every three hours from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. for three days.

The researchers found the body glow rose and fell over the day, with its lowest point at 10 a.m. and its peak at 4 p.m., dropping gradually after that. These findings suggest there is light emission linked to our body clocks, most likely due to how our metabolic rhythms fluctuate over the course of the day.

Faces glowed more than the rest of the body. This might be because faces are more tanned than the rest of the body, since they get moreexposure to sunlight — the pigment behind skin color, melanin, has fluorescent components that could enhance the body's miniscule light production.

Since this faint light is linked with the body's metabolism, this finding suggests cameras that can spot the weak emissions could help spot medical conditions, said researcher Hitoshi Okamura, a circadian biologist at Kyoto University in Japan.

"If you can see the glimmer from the body's surface, you could see the whole body condition," said researcher Masaki Kobayashi, a biomedical photonics specialist at the Tohoku Institute of Technology in Sendai, Japan.

The scientists detailed their findings online July 16 in the journal PLoS ONE.
 
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