Neurobiology behind meditation, who knows what is going on in their brain?

in #biology6 years ago
Meditation has been performed for several thousand years and present in most religious practices. From east to west, from Norway to India and from America to Japan, people have a general knowledge and since science has shed some light on the benefits of meditating, it is no surprise that humming that om sound has gain popularity. What once was reserved for religion is now well explained with psychology and biology. It actually has absolutely nothing to do with religion and everything to do with your brain chemistry. The beauty of demystifying the capabilities of our bodies is extraordinary.


CC0 image, Unsplash, author: Simon Migaj, adapted

I am not trying to take away your relationship with God and if you use meditation for that purpose that is just fine because using it is what matters. I am just trying to demystify some things and explain to you how, psychologically speaking, your relationship with your self is more important and religion has nothing to do with it. There is also no secret how your hormone levels can be influenced with exercise, breathing techniques, and focus exercises. We do not know who was the first to meditate and how meditation came to be but it has been described from around 600 B.C in India so when it comes to time referencing, that is the number that is usually given to those who wonder about the origins. If you are interested in history and differences between Western vs Asiatic meditation, I suggest you read about Professor Eifring research:

From God to geometric figures from University of Oslo, Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages

East/West differences in meditation: Spirituality or technique from sciencedaily.com

If you are interested in the range of challenging meditation experience, a study from Brown University chronicled and categorized meditation experiences as well as the factors that influence them. You can read it here:

The varieties of contemplative experience: A mixed-methods study of meditation-related challenges in Western Buddhists by Jared R. Lindahl, Nathan E. Fisher, David J. Cooper, Rochelle K. Rosen, Willoughby B. Britton

There was a new study in 2018 with results that showed how gains in the ability to sustain attention developed through intensive meditation training are maintained up to seven years later. It was published in the Journal of Cognitive Enhancement and based on the Shamatha Project, a major investigation of the cognitive, psychological and biological effects of meditation led by researchers at the University of California, Davis, Center for Mind and Brain. The altering of the longitudinal trajectories of cognitive change across a person's life has now, for the first time, been backed by some evidence.

Influencing human cognition...

The study followed 60 experienced meditators who attended three-month meditation retreats and received ongoing instruction in meditation techniques. They attended group meditation sessions twice a day and engaged in individual practice for about six hours a day. Immediately after the study was over in the retreats, participants showed improvements in attention, general psychological well-being, and the ability to cope with stress but the interesting thing happened seven years after. 40 participants, who remained in the study, maintained cognitive gains and did not show typical patterns of age-related decline in sustained attention. There is a strong indication that lifestyles and their personalities might have played a huge role and more research is needed but this opens an interesting door into finding out just how impacted our brains can be from meditative practices, it sure is indicating that. You can read the full research here:

Cognitive Aging and Long-Term Maintenance of Attentional Improvements Following Meditation Training by Anthony P. Zanesco, Brandon G. King, Katherine A. MacLean, Clifford D. Saron

The Journal of Cognitive, Affective & Behavioral Neuroscience published a study back in 2015 about researchers from the University of Surrey discovering a link between meditation and how individuals respond to feedback. Participants varied in experience from novice and non-meditators to experienced ones. They were trained to select images associated with a reward where each pair of images had varying probabilities of a reward. They eventually learned to select the pairing with the higher outcome and those who meditated were more successful.

Learn from positive outcomes...

Those participants who meditated were more successful in selecting high-probability pairings which indicates a tendency to learn from positive outcomes. Non-meditators, on the other hand, learned the pattern via low-probability pairings suggesting a tendency to learn from the negative outcomes. They were all connected to an EEG that recorded their electrical patterns in the brain. Results found that while all three groups (non-meditators, novice ones, and experienced) responded similarly to positive feedback, the neurological response to negative feedback was highest in the non-meditation group. This indicates that the brains of meditators are less affected by negative feedback, and it just may be a result of altered dopamine levels caused by meditation. Dopamine beeing integral to how we learn and process information has previously been established from many studies on patients with Parkinson's disease who had its levels severely reduced. Dopamine levels are connected with how quickly we learn from our mistakes and our need to keep making them before we find the right answer. We may benefit from meditation to increase our productivity. Here is what the leading author of the study had to say:

"Humans have been meditating for over 2000 years, but the neural mechanisms of this practice are still relatively unknown. These findings demonstrate that, on a deep level, meditators respond to feedback in a more even-handed way than non-meditators, which may help to explain some of the psychological benefits they experience from the practice."
-Paul Knytl, lead author and PhD candidate in psychology

You can read the full study here:

Meditation experience predicts negative reinforcement learning and is associated with attenuated FRN amplitude by Paul Knytl, Bertram Opitz

Researchers from Leiden University have conducted a study that indicates how you don't need to be an experienced meditator to profit from meditation. You may get better at creative thinking even if you have never meditated before. Cognitive psychologist Lorenza Colzato and his team showed how even novices may profit from meditation and get better at conceiving new ideas but not all forms of meditation have the same effect on creativity. Participants performed better in divergent thinking after Open Monitoring meditation but that effect was not present after Focused Attention meditation.

Divergent and convergent thinking...

There is a difference between divergent and convergent thinking. With divergent thinking, you are expanding your focus. For example, I tell you the word knife and you need to think about all the possible uses for it. With convergent thinking, you are focusing on one solution or an idea. I may tell you words like swim, fish, minerals, sea and you would conclude that they all have water as the common link. While solving convergent-thinking problems, practitioners used an insight strategy, as opposed to an analytical approach, more than the novices. The study found that open-monitoring meditation induces a control state that promotes divergent thinking while the focused-attention meditation supports convergent thinking. If you are a novice who has just now discovered how there is more than one style of meditation and fell down the proverbial rabbit hole, welcome to the fun side of life. Not all meditation is the same and there are actually quite a number of different kinds but we will get to that later on. This study is available here:

Prior Meditation Practice Modulates Performance and Strategy Use in Convergent- and Divergent-Thinking Problems by Lorenza S. Colzato, Ayca Szapora, Dominique Lippelt, Bernhard Hommel

Give this one a read too:
Enhanced tactile acuity through mental states by Sebastian T. Philipp, Tobias Kalisch, Thomas Wachtler & Hubert R. Dinse

I did mention how you might have fallen through the rabbit hole and just now figured out how meditation is not a word for one specific thing. It is a general term for various kinds of practices. Mindfulness, Zen, Acem, Meditation drumming, Chakra, Buddhist, transcendental meditation, walking meditation, loving-kindness, Vipassana... I could go on but I choose not to overwhelm you. The simplest way to remember what kind of meditation exists is to remember that there are two main categories; concentrative meditation and nondirective meditation. With concentrative, you are suppressing thoughts by concentrating on breathing or a specific thing while with the nondirective ones, the mind is allowed to wander as it pleases. Your brain activity is different depending on what type of meditation you are practicing.

MRI machine to the rescue...

The Norwegian University of Science and Technology performed a study using the MRI machines to see what exactly is going on in the brains of people who are meditating. Participants took two different mental meditation activities, nondirective meditation, and a concentrative one. Nondirective meditation showed higher activity than during rest in the part of the brain dedicated to processing self-related thoughts and feelings but when the participants were performing concentrative meditation, the activity in that part of the brain was almost the same as when they were just resting and not meditating. The interesting thing is that this part of the brain has its highest activity when we rest. It is our basic operating system that takes over when external tasks do not require our attention. One of the conclusions from the co-author of the study was this:

"The study indicates that nondirective meditation allows for more room to process memories and emotions than during concentrated meditation,"
-Svend Davanger, a neuroscientist at the University of Oslo, and co-author of the study

You can read the study here:

Nondirective meditation activates default mode network and areas associated with memory retrieval and emotional processing by Jian Xu, Alexandra Vik, Inge R. Groote, Jim Lagopoulos, Are Holen, Øyvind Ellingsen, Asta K. Håberg, and Svend Davanger

Saying or even thinking how meditation is the cure for something would be wrong. Consider it a helper and a beneficiary instead. There is no danger of it, no side-effects so it does not matter if you are healthy or sick, meditating will not hurt you. Relaying on meditation alone to fix whatever is wrong with you is something I would not suggest, on the contrary, I would advise you against it. Nothing is a magical fast cure and for those of you suffering from psychological illnesses, consult your doctor before trying anything new. He or she knows your diagnoses and can recommend practices that will be most beneficial for you. Meditation has been proven as a great helper for our health. It has potential in pain reduction, enhancing brain performance and a great effect on calming people and helping them deal with stress in their every-day lives. Here is the list of studies that I have found and recommend you take a look at:

Cognitive Aging and Long-Term Maintenance of Attentional Improvements Following Meditation Training by Anthony P. Zanesco, Brandon G. King, Katherine A. MacLean, Clifford D. Saron

Arousal vs. Relaxation: A Comparison of the Neurophysiological and Cognitive Correlates of Vajrayana and Theravada Meditative Practices by Ido Amihai, Maria Kozhevnikov

Alterations in Resting-State Functional Connectivity Link Mindfulness Meditation With Reduced Interleukin-6: A Randomized Controlled Trial by J. David Creswell, Adrienne A. Taren, Emily K. Lindsay, Carol M. Greco, Peter J. Gianaros, April Fairgrieve, Anna L. Marsland, Kirk Warren Brown, Baldwin M. Way, Rhonda K. Rosen, Jennifer L. Ferris

What meditation techniques do I recomend?

I have been meditating for over 15 years and whenever someone asks me what they should do my answer is simple. Do everything and try everything. There are many different meditations and not all will be to your liking. Some you will enjoy and consider easy while others will be hard. Find those that work best for you. We are all different so do not trust people who will say to you how this or that is the best. It may be best for them. It does not mean it will be best for you. I am always poo-pooing various gurus and self-proclaimed experts when they proclaim their practice to be the only one that works. Your brain is the thing that works, meditation is just one way of using it. I do not have all the answer nor do I think that anyone has. I can only speak from my own personal experience and from everything that I have read and researched so far. There is room for a lot more. If you are interested in learning about meditation or how to meditate, I suggest you read my series of posts about meditation that I have written exclusively for this platform. I hope you will find them useful.

PART 1: Introduction to meditation and general categories
PART 2: Mindfulness meditation
PART 3: Vipassana meditation
PART 4: 3 categories of benefits
PART 5: Guided meditation
PART 6: Breathing techniques
PART 7: Grounding meditation
PART 8: Gazing meditation
PART 9: Theravada walking meditation
PART 10: Metta meditation
PART 11: Meditation for children
PART 12: Chakra meditation
PART 13: Difference between mental and emotional meditation

You are welcome to ask questions or seek advice but keep in mind that your journey is your own, not mine to take. Your brain chemistry will react to different techniques and you will find how some types of breathing exercises relax you faster than others. That is ok. Find those that work best for you and do not take anyone's words for it, not even mine. Do your research, read, learn, and discover. Take care of your psychological health and enjoy every step on the way to becoming the best you can be.

To learn more about this topic, check out these REFERENCES:

East/West differences in meditation: Spirituality or technique

Seven-year follow-up shows lasting cognitive gains from meditation

Meditation adapts the brain to respond better to feedback

Meditation makes you more creative, study suggests

How the mind sharpens the senses

Range of challenging meditation experiences

This is your brain on meditation: Brain processes more thoughts, feelings during meditation, study shows

Until next time,
KEEP YOUR SMILE ON!

Image sources AND LICENCES in order of appearance:

- all images used in this post are free for commercial use, they are royalty free with the links to original images provided under them
- titles are made with the CC0 image from Pixabay that can be found here
- line divider that I use is from FREE CLIPART LIBRARY, and is here
- my bitmoji avatar was created on https://www.bitmoji.com/, visit the site to create yourown

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Thank you very very much my kind and smart people!!! 💚💚💚

Probably one of the best posts about meditation I have read here let alone the internet. Very clear. One of the reasons I like it is because it appeals to my scientific rational side. It wasn't until I did vipassana that I really appreciated it's value, but that's because they do explain the effects on the brain and biochemistry rather than going into woo woo that I never quite appreciated or liked. They recommend not creatively visualising, for example, as that just gets you 'attached' to a visualisation or something you find 'beautiful' like a lily or a forest - when we should equally meditate, for example, on rotting corpses. I'm so excited about going to sit this vipassana on the 26th... yay.

Have you read/heard of any studies re: lengthening the telomeres? They suggest it actually changes the strands of your DNA. Amazing.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29518528

I'm sure you have! xx

I actually did not hear about it but I will most definitely read it. Thank you so much for bringing it to my attention!!! Thanks for such a kind feedback, much love 💚

Hhmmm.... I will never consider meditation in the same way as before... really. I always considered that as a loss of time and reading your blog made me actually thinking :)

Thank you for that honest feedback, it really means a lot. You are not lonely in it, however. A lot of people are still mystifying meditation when it is actually pretty simple. We have a brain, that brain works. We have hormones, those hormones impact our bodies. We know that in certain states hormone levels change and the overall brain chemistry changes. That chemistry is not the same when we are under stress or relaxed, exercising or sleeping. The brain always fascinated me, there is still soooooo much room for research and I am pretty excited what more we will find out about it. :)

Many people (like me) only need some articles to read about it, with scientific facts. My wife is really happy now (because I always turned out our discussions about that, considering it as loss of time. This is something we may actually try with our big boy in order to sharpen his focus (it is hard for him to concentrate in general). I will let you know whether it works.

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Ahh what a lovely read to open up all thought about Meditation. I was only thinking that mediation is a process of bringing calmness within , through concentrating on one particular thing. It is always good to have some meditation to bring more self conciousness

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Absolutely @steemflow and to be honest, meditation can make you unsettled too as you deal with past hurts, certain brain patterns and so on - it can be quite a challenge!! When people expect it to be JUST about being calm and it's not always, they can get quite hte shock! But better to have a way to process than quash it all down and hide it with drugs, alcohol, and Netflix. And Steemit haha

Thank you guys, you are absolutely lovely with your comments, much love! 💚

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This is a great post that's just overflowing with resources! Resteeming! I am also curious to explore it to see which of these meditation techniques align closely with shamanic and quantum meditation practices, I feel like they are both emotional as well as mental, and I'm excited to start digging! Thanks for this post, just terrific.

Xx ToL

Ps hope to see you on radio show tonight!

I overslept the radio show, Yule was too much for me hihi. Thanks for a lovely feedback! 💚

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