Factors
Experiences are characterized by the presence of the following three factors: * disembodiment – an apparent location of the self outside one's body; * impression of seeing the world from an elevated and distanced, but egocentric visuo-spatial perspective; * impression of seeing one's own body from this perspective (autoscopy). The autoscopic phenomenon is classified in the following six tipologies: autoscopic hallucination, he-autoscopy or heautoscopic proper, feeling of a presence, out of body experience, negative and inner forms of autoscopy. Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, Lausanne, and Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland, have reviewed some of the classical precipitating factors of autoscopy. These are sleep, drug abuse, and general anesthesia as well as neurobiology. They have compared them with recent findings on neurological and neurocognitive mechanisms of autoscopy; the reviewed data suggest that autoscopic experiences are due to functional disintegration of lower-level multisensory processing and abnormal higher-level self-processing at the temporoparietal junction.Related disorders
Heautoscopy is a term used in psychiatry and neurology for the reduplicative hallucination of "seeing one's own body at a distance". It can occur as a symptom in schizophrenia and epilepsy. Heautoscopy is considered a possible explanation forSee also
*References
{{reflistFurther reading
* Bhaskaran, R; Kumar, A; Nayar, K. K. (1990). ''Autoscopy in hemianopic field''. ''Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry'': 53 1016–1017. * Blanke, O; Landis, T; Seeck, M. (2004). ''Out-of-body experience and autoscopy of neurological origin''. ''Brain'' 127: 243–258. * Brugger, P. (2002). ''Reflective mirrors: Perspective-taking in autoscopic phenomena''. ''Cognitive Neuropsychiatry'' 7: 179–194. * Brugger, P; Regard, M; Landis, T. (1996). ''Unilaterally felt "presences": the neuropsychiatry of one's invisible doppelgänger''. ''Neuropsychiatry, Neuropsychology, and Behavioral Neurology'' 9: 114–122. * Devinsky, O., Feldmann, E., Burrowes, K; Bromfield, E. (1989). ''Autoscopic phenomena with seizures''. ''Archives of Neurology'' 46: 1080–1088. * Lukianowicz, N. (1958). ''Autoscopic phenomena''. ''Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry'' 80: 199–220.External links