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arxiv: 2603.26630 · v2 · pith:2QTPJW2Hnew · submitted 2026-03-27 · ⚛️ physics.bio-ph · physics.optics· q-bio.NC

Revisiting claims of extracranial biophoton detection from the human brain

classification ⚛️ physics.bio-ph physics.opticsq-bio.NC
keywords brainemissionreportedbiologicalbiophotonconditionsheadhuman
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Ultraweak photon emission, also referred to as biological autoluminescence or biophoton emission, is the spontaneous emission of extremely low levels of light from a broad range of biological systems. Recent studies have reported that UPE measured extracranially can serve as a potential non-invasive biomarker of brain activity. Here, we show that this interpretation suffers from serious problems. We show that, when observed under properly dark conditions, the UPE from the head is much weaker than what is reported in certain papers on 'brain UPE' from human heads. We also show that the large signals reported in these studies can be explained by background light contamination. Furthermore, photons with wavelengths < 600 nm are strongly attenuated by scalp and skull tissues, and longer wavelengths fall largely outside the effective spectral sensitivity of the photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) used. As a consequence, even if UPE from the head is detected under properly background-free conditions, it is likely to be dominated by emission from the scalp rather than from the brain, certainly as long as PMTs are used. Our results emphasize the importance of careful experimental design to make genuine progress on this important question.

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