Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation

Focused attention meditation (FAM) is a category of meditation based on an EEG pattern, which helps the wandering mind to focus on a particular object. It seems that prayer may, in certain respects, be similar to FAM. It is believed that emotional experience correlates mainly with theta, but also wi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paweł Dobrakowski, Michal Blaszkiewicz, Sebastian Skalski
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
EEG
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/24/9567
id doaj-7a1bdac6f48044789e412a894591a983
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7a1bdac6f48044789e412a894591a9832020-12-22T00:02:14ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1661-78271660-46012020-12-01179567956710.3390/ijerph17249567Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and MeditationPaweł Dobrakowski0Michal Blaszkiewicz1Sebastian Skalski2Institute of Psychology, Humanitas University, 41-200 Sosnowiec, PolandInstitute of Psychology, Humanitas University, 41-200 Sosnowiec, PolandInstitute of Psychology, Polish Academy of Sciences, 00-378 Warsaw, PolandFocused attention meditation (FAM) is a category of meditation based on an EEG pattern, which helps the wandering mind to focus on a particular object. It seems that prayer may, in certain respects, be similar to FAM. It is believed that emotional experience correlates mainly with theta, but also with selective alpha, with internalized attention correlating mainly with the synchronous activity of theta and alpha. The vast majority of studies indicate a possible impact of transcendence in meditation on the alpha wave in EEG. No such reports are available for prayer. Seventeen women and nineteen men aged 27–64 years with at least five years of intensive meditation/prayer experience were recruited to participate in the study. We identified the two largest groups which remained in the meditation trend originating from the Buddhist system (14 people) (Buddhist meditators) and in the Christian-based faith (15 people) (Christian meditators). EEG signal was recorded with open eyes, closed eyes, during meditation/prayer, and relaxation. After the EEG recording, an examination was conducted using the Scale of Spiritual Transcendence. Buddhist meditators exhibited a statistically significantly higher theta amplitude at Cz during meditation compared to relaxation. Meanwhile, spiritual openness favored a higher theta amplitude at Pz during relaxation. Our study did not reveal statistically significant differences in frontal areas with regard to alpha and theta, which was often indicated in previous studies. It seems necessary to analyze more closely the midline activity in terms of dispersed neural activity integration.https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/24/9567meditationprayerEEGalpha bandtheta band
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paweł Dobrakowski
Michal Blaszkiewicz
Sebastian Skalski
spellingShingle Paweł Dobrakowski
Michal Blaszkiewicz
Sebastian Skalski
Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
meditation
prayer
EEG
alpha band
theta band
author_facet Paweł Dobrakowski
Michal Blaszkiewicz
Sebastian Skalski
author_sort Paweł Dobrakowski
title Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation
title_short Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation
title_full Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation
title_fullStr Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation
title_full_unstemmed Changes in the Electrical Activity of the Brain in the Alpha and Theta Bands during Prayer and Meditation
title_sort changes in the electrical activity of the brain in the alpha and theta bands during prayer and meditation
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1661-7827
1660-4601
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Focused attention meditation (FAM) is a category of meditation based on an EEG pattern, which helps the wandering mind to focus on a particular object. It seems that prayer may, in certain respects, be similar to FAM. It is believed that emotional experience correlates mainly with theta, but also with selective alpha, with internalized attention correlating mainly with the synchronous activity of theta and alpha. The vast majority of studies indicate a possible impact of transcendence in meditation on the alpha wave in EEG. No such reports are available for prayer. Seventeen women and nineteen men aged 27–64 years with at least five years of intensive meditation/prayer experience were recruited to participate in the study. We identified the two largest groups which remained in the meditation trend originating from the Buddhist system (14 people) (Buddhist meditators) and in the Christian-based faith (15 people) (Christian meditators). EEG signal was recorded with open eyes, closed eyes, during meditation/prayer, and relaxation. After the EEG recording, an examination was conducted using the Scale of Spiritual Transcendence. Buddhist meditators exhibited a statistically significantly higher theta amplitude at Cz during meditation compared to relaxation. Meanwhile, spiritual openness favored a higher theta amplitude at Pz during relaxation. Our study did not reveal statistically significant differences in frontal areas with regard to alpha and theta, which was often indicated in previous studies. It seems necessary to analyze more closely the midline activity in terms of dispersed neural activity integration.
topic meditation
prayer
EEG
alpha band
theta band
url https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/24/9567
work_keys_str_mv AT pawełdobrakowski changesintheelectricalactivityofthebraininthealphaandthetabandsduringprayerandmeditation
AT michalblaszkiewicz changesintheelectricalactivityofthebraininthealphaandthetabandsduringprayerandmeditation
AT sebastianskalski changesintheelectricalactivityofthebraininthealphaandthetabandsduringprayerandmeditation
_version_ 1724374586714226688