Affiliation:
1. Clinical Neuropsychology Laboratory Behavioral Neuroscience Program Laurentian University
Abstract
The hypothesis of vectorial hemisphericity predicts that left hemispheric intrusions of the right hemispheric equivalent of the sense of self should be associated with the experience of a “presence” of someone else. The neurophenomenological profile of a woman whose medical history satisfied these theoretical criteria (verified electrical anomalies that could encourage phasic discharges within the right temporal lobe and atrophy within the left temporoparietal region) is presented. In addition to interactions between electrical seizures and thinking, she reported a long history of sensed presences, ego-alien intrusions, and “sudden knowing of the subsequent sequences of seizures” before they occurred clinically. The existence of these neurocognitive processes demands a reevaluation of the psychiatric default explanations of “hysteria” and questions the belief that “awareness during seizures” or “premonition of subsequent somatosensory experience” contraindicates an epileptic process.
Subject
Sensory Systems,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
Cited by
6 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
1. Reading Sacred Texts;GCRR Press;2021-02-05
2. Epilepsia: una historia de voces y fantasmas;Neurología;2020-10
3. Epilepsy: a story of voices and ghosts;Neurología (English Edition);2020-10
4. Component Changes to the Altered State;Psychological Perspectives on Reality, Consciousness and Paranormal Experience;2019
5. Predictive coding in agency detection;Religion, Brain & Behavior;2017-11-21