Evidence of Correlated Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signals Between Distant Human Brains
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Plain English Summary
Can one person's brain activity show up in someone else's brain β with no physical connection between them? This 2003 study, the first to use fMRI (a brain scanner that tracks blood flow) to test the idea, put two meditating colleagues in separate rooms 10 meters apart. One person watched a flickering checkerboard while the other sat in a shielded MRI scanner trying to stay mentally 'connected.' Remarkably, when Subject 1 was the receiver, their visual cortex lit up as if they were seeing the checkerboard themselves β even though they weren't. But when they swapped roles, the effect vanished for Subject 2, hinting this isn't something just anyone can do on demand. It was only one pair, so we can't generalize too far, but it was striking enough to inspire follow-up fMRI studies by other teams.
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- Electroencephalographic Evidence of Correlated Event-Related Signals Between the Brains of Spatially and Sensory Isolated Human Subjects β Standish, Leanna J (2004)
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π Cite this paper
Standish, Leanna J, Johnson, L. Clark, Kozak, Leila, Richards, Todd (2003). Evidence of Correlated Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signals Between Distant Human Brains. Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine.
@article{standish_2003_evidence,
title = {Evidence of Correlated Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signals Between Distant Human Brains},
author = {Standish, Leanna J and Johnson, L. Clark and Kozak, Leila and Richards, Todd},
year = {2003},
journal = {Alternative Therapies in Health and Medicine},
}