Ray William J, Odenwald Michael, Neuner Frank, Schauer Maggie, Ruf Martina, Wienbruch Christian, Rockstroh Brigitte, Elbert Thomas
University of Konstanz and Center for Psychiatry, Reichenau, Germany.
Psychol Sci. 2006 Oct;17(10):825-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-9280.2006.01788.x.
From a neuroscience perspective, little is known about the long-term effect of torture. Dissociative experiences and posttraumatic stress disorder are often the results of this experience. We examined psychological dissociation within a group of 23 torture victims and report its manifestations within neural networks in the human brain. In particular, we observed that dissociative experiences are associated with slow abnormal brain waves generated in left ventrolateral frontal cortex. Given that focal slow waves often result from depriving neural networks of major input, the present results may indicate decoupling of frontal affective processors from left cortical language areas. This interpretation is consistent with the fact that disturbed access to structured verbal memory concerning traumatic events is a core feature of the dissociative experience.