Quote:A bartender has claimed a supernatural being has been causing mischief in her Gloucestershire pub.The Plough Inn, Prestbury, is known for as being one of the most haunted taverns in the country - featuring a whole host of spooky folklore.And now it seems as if a phantom menace had been smashing glasses in the dead of night all over the pub floor.Bartender Khloe Fry, 24, arrived for work at 10am on Monday to find all the glasses and bottle smashed.Khloe said: “I thought it was an earthquake.”Bar staff that were on duty closed the bar as usual at 11.30pm - where they claim that everything was normal.Khloe says that “It looks like they have been pulled from the back, forward."Which is really odd.”
They show a difference between OBE'ers vs Non-OBE'er-Controls where OBE'rs...
1) P1 event related potential deflection is reduced compared with controls,
2) Alpha-band phase locking between trials is reduced compared to controls, and
3) A reduction in the mean power spectrum calculated across all channels compared to controls (which they later seem to suggest is insignificant).
There are a lot of assumptions and speculative discussions by the authors about what these results might mean, but the actual measurements themselves look OK, and quite interesting to me, considering they found reductions, which appear inversely correlated with a the likelihood of having a spontaneous OBE.
Quote:Abstract
It has been suggested that individual differences in cortical excitability leading to disruption of the timing and integration of sensory information processing may explain why some people have out of body experiences (OBE) in the absence of any known pathological or psychiatric condition. Here we recorded EEG from people who either had, or had not experienced an OBE in order to investigate the neural dynamics of OBE in the non-clinical population.
A screening questionnaire was completed by 551 people, 24% of whom reported having at least one OBE. Participants who were free of any psychiatric or neurological diagnoses, including migraines, were invited to take part in subsequent EEG recording. EEG data were obtained from 19 people who had had an OBE and 20 who had not. Amplitude of the visual P1 ERP deflection and consistency of alpha-band phase locking were significantly reduced in the participants who had had an OBE. We did not find any group differences in resting state power or in visually induced gamma oscillations. These results provide support for the claim that cortical differences, particularly with respect to the timing of visual information processing, may give rise to OBE in clinically healthy individuals. To our knowledge, this study is the first to compare EEG variables obtained from people who have, and have not, had an OBE.