Publication | Closed Access
RESEARCH: "Religious Experience and Emotion: Evidence for Distinctive Cognitive Neural Patterns"
62
Citations
55
References
2005
Year
Brain FunctionNeural NetworkAffective NeuroscienceReligiosityBrain OrganizationSocial SciencesPsychologyEmotional ResponseReligion StudiesPrincipal Component AnalysisCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceNeuroimagingReligious ExperienceNeurobiological FactorSpiritualityNeuroscienceMedicineEmotion
Categorical comparisons of neuroimaging data suggest that religious experience is cognitively mediated. Cognition involves coordinated integration of large-scale networks. The aim of this study was to distinguish neural networks mediating religious experience. A principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to cerebral blood flow data of a Christian religious experience and a happy emotion. Differences in variance patterns (PCs) were assessed. The religious experience and the emotion were distinguished by PC9, a neural network that evidenced two forms of expression: One involved prefrontal structures, which participate in social-relational cognition and which were shown previously to correlate with the religious state. Another involved cortical areas important for emotion-related language processing, reward, and action preparation. The results suggest that an essential dimension of religious experience involves social-relational cognition, mediated by a specific neocortical network.
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