Quiet Mind Meditation

This is a quiet space .. designed to inspire, nurture and support your meditation practice so that you might find your own quiet mind

Thursday 28 April 2011

Meditation Cultivates Attentional Skills

'Oneness' Feeling Experienced by Monks, Explained
By: Marina Watson Peláez, TIME MAGAZINE
We now have further insights into how monks' brains are reorganized during meditation.


Zoran Josipovic, a research scientist and adjunct university professor at New York University, has been placing Buddhists in a FMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) machine, which tracks their blood flow as they meditate.  Josipovic, who moonlights as a monk himself, wanted to know more about the state of "oneness" or "nonduality" that monks achieve by meditating.  "One thing that meditation does for those who practise it a lot is that it cultivates attentional skills," Dr Josipovic told the BBC. He added that it helped to live a happier and tranquil life.

His main focus was an understudied part of the brain that controls self-reflective thoughts, know as the default network, which is activated when people engage with their own emotions.
The extrinsic part of the brain is activated when people focus on external tasks, like playing tennis or pouring coffee.
Jospovic found that Buddhist monks, and other experienced meditators, can activate both neural networks at the same time while meditating, which he said explained people's experience of harmony with with their surroundings.
The default network was discovered in 2001 when Dr Marcus Raichle, a neurologist at the Washington University School of Medicine in the US state of Missouri, scanned brains of people who had no tasks to perform. She was stunned to find that a second, unnoticed network was activated when the participants became bored.
This study, which is soon to be published, will not only explain the neurological implications of the "oneness" experience, but it might also further our understanding of psychological disorders including depression, autism and Alzheimers.

1 comment:

  1. Its really cool and thoughtful post,hope to read some in future .I too have created blog on meditation and in my blog list i have given your blogs links.Please atleast visit once
    http://meditationandawareness.blogspot.com/

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