A recent article in the publication Frontiers in Human Neuroscience tries to pinpoint a supernatural account to a scientific explanation.
A young, healthy, 24 year old Canadian woman told scientists that she could create her own "out of body experiences." This concept has been reported before by people who have had "near death" experiences where they state that at some point, they float above themselves (as medical personnel work to revive them), aware of the surroundings and sometimes see a bright one light.
The subject of the study said that she can have these experiences at will. The woman not only described what this was like but researchers studied
her brain while she had an “extra-corporeal experience.”
In order to test her account, scientists did a CAT scan study while she was having one of her events. “She appeared surprised that not everyone could experience this,” the study authors wrote.
She first remembers willing herself out of her body when she was in
preschool, using it as a “distraction during the time kids were asked to
nap.” As she grew up, she assumed “everyone could do it.”
When in such a state she said she could see herself in the air above
her body. She could watch herself move but was aware that her “real”
body was not moving.
“I feel myself moving, or, more accurately, can make myself feel as
if I am moving. I know perfectly well that I am not actually moving,”
she told the researchers. “There is no duality of body and mind when
this happens, not really. In fact, I am hyper-sensitive to my body at
that point, because I am concentrating so hard on the sensation of
moving. I am the one moving – me – my body. For example, if I ‘spin’ for
long enough, I get dizzy. I do not see myself above my body. Rather, my
whole body has moved up. I feel it as being above where I know it
actually is. I usually also picture myself as moving up in my mind’s
eye, but the mind is not substantive. It does not move unless the body
does.”
In the case study, researchers conducted tests that included MRI
analysis and questionnaires. What they found was that the brain during
such “extra-corporeal experiences” exhibited activation in areas that
are consistent with other studies about out-of-body experiences, which
neurologists had associated with hallucinations.
The data suggest that the ECE reported here represented
an unusual type of kinesthetic imagery that shares some features of
previously described out-of-body experiences and some features of more
typical motor imagery. The cerebellum also shows strong activation that is
consistent with the participant’s report of the impression of movement
during the ECE. There are also left middle and superior orbital frontal
gyri activations, structures often associated with action monitoring.
The researchers called the woman’s experience “a novel one,” as she was healthy, young and didn’t have any brain abnormalities.
They acknowledged that there are limitations to the study in that it
only relies on one woman’s account. However, they wrote that due to her
level of detail and unusual descriptions, “we are inclined to take her
report at face value.”
Overall, the authors believe this woman’s experience could mean that
others have such an ability to will themselves out of their bodies as
well, but, perhaps like this woman, they don’t report it because they
think it is normal and widely experienced. The researchers also wondered
whether if it is an ability held by infants and children that is lost
and forgotten without practice.
The application of an "out of body" experience to LOST is not a new idea. One
theory is that the plane crash survivors were having out of body
experiences - - - some believe human souls migrate from the body with
the same consciousness, awareness and memory. The concept that the main characters were souls freed from their human bodies to re-imagine their lives on an island before moving on in the after life does match up with The Ending.