The neural correlates of the awe experience: Reduced default mode network activity during feelings of awe
Publication year
2019Number of pages
14 p.
Source
Human Brain Mapping, 40, 12, (2019), pp. 3561-3574ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor

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Organization
SW OZ BSI SCP
Journal title
Human Brain Mapping
Volume
vol. 40
Issue
iss. 12
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 3561
Page end
p. 3574
Subject
Behaviour Change and Well-beingAbstract
In the present fMRI study, we aimed to obtain insight into the key brain networks involved in the experience of awe - a complex emotion that is typically elicited by perceptually vast stimuli. Participants were presented with awe‐eliciting, positive and neutral videos, while they were instructed to get fully absorbed in the scenery or to count the number of perspective changes. By using a whole‐brain analysis we found that several brain regions that are considered part of the default mode network (DMN), including the frontal pole, the angular gyrus, and the posterior cingulate cortex, were more strongly activated in the absorption condition. But this was less the case when participants were watching awe videos. We suggest that while watching awe videos, participants were deeply immersed in the videos and that levels of self‐reflective thought were as much reduced during the awe videos, as during the perspective counting condition. In contrast, key regions of the fronto‐parietal network (FPN), including the supramarginal gyrus, the medial frontal gyrus, and the insula, were most strongly activated in the analytical condition when participants were watching awe compared to positive and neutral videos. This finding underlines the captivating, immersive, and attention‐grabbing nature of awe stimuli that is considered to be responsible for reductions in self‐reflective thought. Together these findings suggest that a key feature of the experience of awe is a reduced engagement in self‐referential processing, in line with the subjective self‐report measures (i.e., participants perceived their self to be smaller).
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [204107]
- Electronic publications [102394]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [27319]
- Open Access publications [71034]
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