Functional Hemispheric Asymmetry and Belief in ESP: Towards a “Neuropsychology of Belief”

Author:

Brugger Peter1,Gamma Alex1,Muri René1,Schafer Markus1,Taylor Kirsten I.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Zurich

2. Department of Psychiatry, VA, San Diego

Abstract

30 right-handed subjects were given a lateralized tachistoscopic lexical-decision task. Subjects' belief in extrasensory perception (ESP) was assessed with a single six-point scale; 16 subjects were designated as believers in ESP and 14 subjects as nonbelievers. Believers in ESP did not exhibit a hemispheric asymmetry for the task while nonbelievers exhibited the expected right visual-field/left-hemisphere dominance documented in the literature. Believers' lack of asymmetry was not caused by an impaired left-hemisphere performance but rather by a significantly enhanced lexical-decision accuracy in the left visual field/right hemisphere compared to nonbelievers. These results are compatible with previous studies indicating a correlation between belief in ESP and a bias for right-hemisphere processing. Moreover, the results are relevant for a discussion of an association between paranormal beliefs and schizotypy: highly schizotypal individuals are not only particularly prone to believe in ESP but are also known to show an attenuation of hemispheric asymmetries in lateralized verbal tasks due to an enhanced contribution of the right hemisphere. We suggest that the neurological basis of delusion-like beliefs may involve a release of right-hemisphere function from left-hemisphere control and sketch the focus of research for a future “neuropsychology of belief.”

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology

Reference46 articles.

1. Critical Thinking and Belief in the Paranormal

2. Blackmore S. J., Khan F. (submitted) Randomness and the paranormal: are sheep less random than goats?

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