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Wesley
11-07-2006, 05:55 PM
can i get an "Amen"!

November 7, 2006
A Neuroscientific Look at Speaking in Tongues
By BENEDICT CAREY

The passionate, sometimes rhythmic, language-like patter that pours forth from religious people who “speak in tongues” reflects a state of mental possession, many of them say. Now they have some neuroscience to back them up.

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania took brain images of five women while they spoke in tongues and found that their frontal lobes — the thinking, willful part of the brain through which people control what they do — were relatively quiet, as were the language centers. The regions involved in maintaining self-consciousness were active. The women were not in blind trances, and it was unclear which region was driving the behavior.

The images, appearing in the current issue of the journal Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, pinpoint the most active areas of the brain. The images are the first of their kind taken during this spoken religious practice, which has roots in the Old and New Testaments and in charismatic churches established in the United States around the turn of the 19th century. The women in the study were healthy, active churchgoers.

“The amazing thing was how the images supported people’s interpretation of what was happening,” said Dr. Andrew B. Newberg, leader of the study team, which included Donna Morgan, Nancy Wintering and Mark Waldman. “The way they describe it, and what they believe, is that God is talking through them,” he said.

Dr. Newberg is also a co-author of “Why We Believe What We Believe.”

In the study, the researchers used imaging techniques to track changes in blood flow in each woman’s brain in two conditions, once as she sang a gospel song and again while speaking in tongues. By comparing the patterns created by these two emotional, devotional activities, the researchers could pinpoint blood-flow peaks and valleys unique to speaking in tongues.

Ms. Morgan, a co-author of the study, was also a research subject. She is a born-again Christian who says she considers the ability to speak in tongues a gift. “You’re aware of your surroundings,” she said. “You’re not really out of control. But you have no control over what’s happening. You’re just flowing. You’re in a realm of peace and comfort, and it’s a fantastic feeling.”

Contrary to what may be a common perception, studies suggest that people who speak in tongues rarely suffer from mental problems. A recent study of nearly 1,000 evangelical Christians in England found that those who engaged in the practice were more emotionally stable than those who did not. Researchers have identified at least two forms of the practice, one ecstatic and frenzied, the other subdued and nearly silent.

The new findings contrasted sharply with images taken of other spiritually inspired mental states like meditation, which is often a highly focused mental exercise, activating the frontal lobes.

JGNI
11-07-2006, 07:51 PM
Dr. Newberg is also a co-author of “Why We Believe What We Believe.”



I read that book and it is far from saying that speaking in tongues looks like it's coming from God, to the contrary.

Hellonwheels
11-07-2006, 08:33 PM
I have a friend who is a former pastor. He told me about some of the nonsensical phrases they sometimes made up, like "see my tie come and tie my tie". Not saying they all do that, but apparently it's a common practice. There's a lot of very calculated practices that go on.

antiquity
11-11-2006, 11:38 AM
Very weird. :eek:

Wise Young
11-11-2006, 01:55 PM
The fact that the senior author of the study wrote a book called "Why we believe what we believe" and a subject of the study is a co-author suggests that this is a study that is not entirely scientific.

Wise.

can i get an "Amen"!

November 7, 2006
A Neuroscientific Look at Speaking in Tongues
By BENEDICT CAREY

The passionate, sometimes rhythmic, language-like patter that pours forth from religious people who “speak in tongues” reflects a state of mental possession, many of them say. Now they have some neuroscience to back them up.

Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania took brain images of five women while they spoke in tongues and found that their frontal lobes — the thinking, willful part of the brain through which people control what they do — were relatively quiet, as were the language centers. The regions involved in maintaining self-consciousness were active. The women were not in blind trances, and it was unclear which region was driving the behavior.

The images, appearing in the current issue of the journal Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, pinpoint the most active areas of the brain. The images are the first of their kind taken during this spoken religious practice, which has roots in the Old and New Testaments and in charismatic churches established in the United States around the turn of the 19th century. The women in the study were healthy, active churchgoers.

“The amazing thing was how the images supported people’s interpretation of what was happening,” said Dr. Andrew B. Newberg, leader of the study team, which included Donna Morgan, Nancy Wintering and Mark Waldman. “The way they describe it, and what they believe, is that God is talking through them,” he said.

Dr. Newberg is also a co-author of “Why We Believe What We Believe.”

In the study, the researchers used imaging techniques to track changes in blood flow in each woman’s brain in two conditions, once as she sang a gospel song and again while speaking in tongues. By comparing the patterns created by these two emotional, devotional activities, the researchers could pinpoint blood-flow peaks and valleys unique to speaking in tongues.

Ms. Morgan, a co-author of the study, was also a research subject. She is a born-again Christian who says she considers the ability to speak in tongues a gift. “You’re aware of your surroundings,” she said. “You’re not really out of control. But you have no control over what’s happening. You’re just flowing. You’re in a realm of peace and comfort, and it’s a fantastic feeling.”

Contrary to what may be a common perception, studies suggest that people who speak in tongues rarely suffer from mental problems. A recent study of nearly 1,000 evangelical Christians in England found that those who engaged in the practice were more emotionally stable than those who did not. Researchers have identified at least two forms of the practice, one ecstatic and frenzied, the other subdued and nearly silent.

The new findings contrasted sharply with images taken of other spiritually inspired mental states like meditation, which is often a highly focused mental exercise, activating the frontal lobes.

Rock
11-11-2006, 10:48 PM
I think I remember reading in the Bible that Moses did this once in leading the children of Israel to the "promised land". Not sure though.

JGNI
11-12-2006, 01:06 AM
The fact that the senior author of the study wrote a book called "Why we believe what we believe" and a subject of the study is a co-author suggests that this is a study that is not entirely scientific.

Wise.

I agree with you, and for other reasons too, but I wonder if the author was not wrongly quoted because as I said I have this book (in which this study is the subject of a whole chapter) and nowhere is it said that this should give credence to the beliefs of those speaking in tongues. At most, I would say that they may say that the brain imaging could explain why those that "speak in tongues" feel the way they do. Here is an excerpt of the book giving a possible explanation for what was observed on the brain imaging (see pic attached):

Another explanation might be that glossolalia is a form of incomplete speech, and thus would not involve the same degree of accuracy that normal speech would require; this too could account for the decreased activity we saw in the frontal lobes.

BTW, the book is not a religious book at all and the main author, from what I understand, is not religious either but is interested in the biological basis of belief, why do many people need to believe in something and why those beliefs are what they are and are so hard to change once imprinted in the brain. Some kind of hypotheses on the fact that it seems to be "hardwired" as much as "softwired"