| Literature DB >> 27834117 |
Michael A Ferguson1, Jared A Nielsen2,3, Jace B King4, Li Dai5, Danielle M Giangrasso4, Rachel Holman6, Julie R Korenberg4,5, Jeffrey S Anderson1,4,6.
Abstract
High-level cognitive and emotional experience arises from brain activity, but the specific brain substrates for religious and spiritual euphoria remain unclear. We demonstrate using functional magnetic resonance imaging scans in 19 devout Mormons that a recognizable feeling central to their devotional practice was reproducibly associated with activation in nucleus accumbens, ventromedial prefrontal cortex, and frontal attentional regions. Nucleus accumbens activation preceded peak spiritual feelings by 1-3 s and was replicated in four separate tasks. Attentional activation in the anterior cingulate and frontal eye fields was greater in the right hemisphere. The association of abstract ideas and brain reward circuitry may interact with frontal attentional and emotive salience processing, suggesting a mechanism whereby doctrinal concepts may come to be intrinsically rewarding and motivate behavior in religious individuals.Entities:
Keywords: Religious neuroscience; functional MRI; reward; spiritual experiences
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27834117 PMCID: PMC5478470 DOI: 10.1080/17470919.2016.1257437
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Neurosci ISSN: 1747-0919 Impact factor: 2.083
Demographics, religiosity, moral values, and personality measures.
| Imaged | Not imaged | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||||
| Female | 7 | 8 | |||
| Male | 12 | 17 | |||
| Age | 27.42 | 3.63 | 30.7 | 8.90 | 0.22 |
| Years of education | 15.7 | 2.28 | 15.82 | 2.75 | 0.86 |
| Dimensions of religiosity total | 20.54 | 1.63 | 20.99 | 1.09 | 0.28 |
| Moral foundations questionnaire | |||||
| Moral foundations harm/care | 21.37 | 4.03 | 19.88 | 4.69 | 0.28 |
| Moral foundations fairness/reciprocity | 18.47 | 4.09 | 17.76 | 4.19 | 0.57 |
| Moral foundations in-group loyalty | 13.58 | 4.65 | 14.12 | 3.68 | 0.67 |
| Moral foundations authority/respect | 15.95 | 4.22 | 16.00 | 3.45 | 0.96 |
| Moral foundations purity/sanctity | 22.84 | 4.55 | 21.72 | 4.34 | 0.41 |
| NEO Five Factor Inventory (raw) | |||||
| Neuroticism | 15.16 | 8.47 | 19.80 | 8.14 | 0.07 |
| Extroversion | 32.10 | 5.94 | 30.76 | 6.51 | 0.49 |
| Openness to experience | 30.42 | 5.40 | 28.88 | 4.82 | 0.32 |
| Agreeableness | 35.68 | 3.77 | 32.00 | 5.00 | 0.01 |
| Conscientiousness | 36.21 | 5.21 | 34.24 | 4.59 | 0.19 |
Figure 1Subjective spiritual feelings throughout the imaging session. Above: Digitized hand-drawn traces for each subject of relative spiritual feelings during the MRI scan session compared to baseline feelings and peak spiritual feelings experienced during private devotional practice and worship services. Traces were drawn during a debriefing following the MRI scan. Below: Following the scan session, participants selected from among 14 terms commonly used in addresses from Mormon leaders which terms best described spiritual feelings they felt during each section of the MRI scan session.
Figure 2Brain activation associated with “feeling the Spirit” across multiple task paradigms. (a) Regions associated with the term “reward” in the functional neuroimaging literature. (b–d) Brain activation associated with “feeling the Spirit” while viewing quotations (b,d) or scriptural passages (c). Color scale shows t-statistic, with significant regions satisfying q < .05, False-discovery rate corrected. (e) Left and right nucleus accumbens activity before and after moments of strong spiritual feeling during audiovisual stimuli. Blue regions show p < 0.05 for activity greater than the mean.
Significant clusters of activation.
| Hemisphere | Region | No. of voxels | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L | Cerebellum | 3483 | 9.33 | 5.39 | −12 | −64 | −13 | <.001 |
| R | Perirolandic | 323 | 8.73 | 5.22 | 45 | −13 | 38 | <.001 |
| L | Cerebellum | 36 | 7.99 | 5.00 | −27 | −58 | −55 | .041 |
| L | Entorhinal cortex | 271 | 7.80 | 4.94 | −15 | −16 | −19 | <.001 |
| R | Anterior temporal | 385 | 6.83 | 4.61 | 42 | −1 | −25 | <.001 |
| L | Perirolandic | 254 | 6.10 | 4.32 | −42 | −16 | 44 | <.001 |
| L | Ventral striatum | 480 | 6.06 | 4.31 | −6 | 2 | −4 | <.001 |
| L | Cerebellum | 39 | 5.89 | 4.24 | −9 | −64 | −46 | .038 |
| L | Frontal pole | 175 | 5.16 | 3.90 | −6 | 53 | 5 | <.001 |
| R | Superior temporal sulcus | 99 | 7.79 | 4.67 | 48 | −34 | −4 | <.001 |
| L | Cerebellum | 67 | 7.45 | 4.57 | −27 | −61 | −49 | .001 |
| R | Perirolandic | 255 | 7.35 | 4.54 | 60 | 2 | 38 | <.001 |
| L | Anterior middle frontal gyrus | 260 | 7.19 | 4.49 | −27 | 47 | 20 | <.001 |
| R | Anterior cingulate cortex | 28 | 6.99 | 4.43 | 18 | 23 | 23 | .048 |
| L | Posterior superior frontal gyrus | 602 | 6.90 | 4.40 | −9 | 11 | 56 | <.001 |
| L | Putamen | 141 | 6.70 | 4.33 | −24 | −22 | 23 | <.001 |
| L | Middle frontal gyrus | 179 | 6.48 | 4.26 | −42 | 8 | 50 | <.001 |
| R | Cerebellum | 403 | 6.41 | 4.23 | 6 | −52 | −19 | <.001 |
| R | Cerebellum | 165 | 6.35 | 4.21 | 30 | −58 | −28 | <.001 |
| L | Ventral striatum | 241 | 6.19 | 4.15 | −9 | −7 | 11 | <.001 |
| R | Cerebellum | 93 | 5.79 | 4.00 | 9 | −67 | −43 | <.001 |
| Central pons | 395 | 7.47 | 4.83 | 0 | −28 | −34 | <.001 | |
| L | Midbrain | 56 | 6.57 | 4.51 | −12 | −19 | −22 | .012 |
| L | Posterior inferior frontal gyrus | 86 | 6.31 | 4.41 | −57 | 8 | 5 | .003 |
| R | Ventral striatum | 276 | 6.11 | 4.33 | 6 | −1 | −1 | <.001 |
| L | Posterior superior frontal gyrus | 1031 | 6.00 | 4.28 | −12 | 8 | 71 | <.001 |
| R | Superior temporal gyrus | 569 | 5.62 | 4.12 | 51 | −28 | 8 | <.001 |
| R | Cerebellum | 66 | 5.51 | 4.07 | 15 | −67 | −34 | .007 |
| R | Posterior cingulate gyrus | 218 | 5.45 | 4.04 | 15 | −16 | 44 | <.001 |
| R | Cerebellum | 91 | 5.33 | 3.99 | 39 | −52 | −40 | .002 |
| R | Cerebellum | 61 | 5.05 | 3.85 | −18 | −61 | −52 | .009 |
| R | Perirolandic | 134 | 4.73 | 3.69 | 48 | −1 | 53 | <.001 |
| R | Premotor cortex | 77 | 4.49 | 3.56 | 24 | −25 | 62 | .004 |
| L | Cerebellum | 43 | 4.48 | 3.55 | −12 | −82 | −16 | .029 |
Figure 3Conjunction analysis shows activation associated with “feeling the Spirit” during all three tasks. Colors show significant activation during 1, 2, or 3 tasks, each thresholded at a t-statistic of 3.69, corresponding to a p-value < .001. Coronal images are shown with subject left on image left, with MNI slices ranging at 5-mm intervals from y = −40 to y = 40.