These are the papers / references for the‚ sensed-presence stuff of Arzy and Blanke discussed above. Also do a search of ‘felt-presences’ as well as this will flag up the research done on patients (Parkinsonism etc) where these experiences are very common.
Arzy, S., Seeck, M., Ortigue, S., Spinelli, L., & Blanke, O. (2006). Induction of an illusory shadow person. Nature, 443, 287.
Arzy, S., Thut, G., Mohr, C., Michel, C. M., & Blanke, O. (2006). Neural basis of embodiment: Distinct contributions of temporoparietal junction and extrastriate body area. The Journal of Neuroscience, 26(31), 8074-8081.
This is a classic review paper by Bentall. Its dated now – but still relevant to studies that have tried to cover hallucination-proneness as a continuum
Bentall, R. P. (1990). The illusion of reality: A review and integration of the psychological research on hallucinations. Psychological Bulletin, 107(1), 82-95.
This paper is good for the SDT approach of separating out perceptual sensitivity and response biases. Differences are only manifest in the response biases.
Bentall, R. P., & Slade, P. D. (1985). Reality testing and auditory hallucinations: A signal detection analysis. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 24, 159-169.
These studies are some of the semantic priming ones I alluded to above. They are really about semantics and not perceptual organisation per-se. Some of them spin themselves as being relevant to what they call apophetic thought processes. These effects are post-perceptual
Gianotti, L. R. R., Mohr, C., Pizzagalli, D., Lehmann, D., & Brugger, P. (2001). Associative processing and paranormal belief. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 55, 595-603.
Pizzagalli, D., Lehmann, D., & Brugger, P. (2001). Lateralized direct and indirect semantic priming effects in subjects with paranormal experiences and beliefs. Psychopathology, 34, 75-80.
Weisbrod, M., Maier, S., Harig, S., Himmelsbach, U., & Spitzer, M. (1998). Lateralised semantic and indirect semantic priming effects in people with schizophrenia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 172, 142-146.
I do also have papers for perception under conditions of noise – and there was one paper published recently in either Psychological Bulletin or Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, looking at how seeing meaning and signals in noise relates to superstitious thinking (which is perhaps more directly related to the common notion of apophenia). But that's just one paper
Hope this helps.
Arzy, S., Seeck, M., Ortigue, S., Spinelli, L., & Blanke, O. (2006). Induction of an illusory shadow person. Nature, 443, 287.
Arzy, S., Thut, G., Mohr, C., Michel, C. M., & Blanke, O. (2006). Neural basis of embodiment: Distinct contributions of temporoparietal junction and extrastriate body area. The Journal of Neuroscience, 26(31), 8074-8081.
This is a classic review paper by Bentall. Its dated now – but still relevant to studies that have tried to cover hallucination-proneness as a continuum
Bentall, R. P. (1990). The illusion of reality: A review and integration of the psychological research on hallucinations. Psychological Bulletin, 107(1), 82-95.
This paper is good for the SDT approach of separating out perceptual sensitivity and response biases. Differences are only manifest in the response biases.
Bentall, R. P., & Slade, P. D. (1985). Reality testing and auditory hallucinations: A signal detection analysis. British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 24, 159-169.
These studies are some of the semantic priming ones I alluded to above. They are really about semantics and not perceptual organisation per-se. Some of them spin themselves as being relevant to what they call apophetic thought processes. These effects are post-perceptual
Gianotti, L. R. R., Mohr, C., Pizzagalli, D., Lehmann, D., & Brugger, P. (2001). Associative processing and paranormal belief. Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences, 55, 595-603.
Pizzagalli, D., Lehmann, D., & Brugger, P. (2001). Lateralized direct and indirect semantic priming effects in subjects with paranormal experiences and beliefs. Psychopathology, 34, 75-80.
Weisbrod, M., Maier, S., Harig, S., Himmelsbach, U., & Spitzer, M. (1998). Lateralised semantic and indirect semantic priming effects in people with schizophrenia. British Journal of Psychiatry, 172, 142-146.
I do also have papers for perception under conditions of noise – and there was one paper published recently in either Psychological Bulletin or Psychonomic Bulletin and Review, looking at how seeing meaning and signals in noise relates to superstitious thinking (which is perhaps more directly related to the common notion of apophenia). But that's just one paper
Hope this helps.