Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation

Objective: Meditation is one type of mental training that has been shown to produce many cognitive benefits. Meditation practice is associated with improvement in concentration and reduction of stress, depression, and anxiety symptoms. Furthermore, different forms of meditation training are now bein...

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Main Authors: Darrin J. Lee, Edwin Kulubya, Philippe Goldin, Amir Goodarzi, Fady Girgis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Neuroscience
Subjects:
EEG
MEG
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2018.00178/full
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spelling doaj-b363fa2d23e44fe28f676e342920e50b2020-11-25T00:09:43ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Neuroscience1662-453X2018-03-011210.3389/fnins.2018.00178320145Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying MeditationDarrin J. Lee0Edwin Kulubya1Philippe Goldin2Amir Goodarzi3Fady Girgis4Neurosurgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, CanadaNeurosurgery, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United StatesNursing, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United StatesNeurosurgery, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United StatesNeurosurgery, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, United StatesObjective: Meditation is one type of mental training that has been shown to produce many cognitive benefits. Meditation practice is associated with improvement in concentration and reduction of stress, depression, and anxiety symptoms. Furthermore, different forms of meditation training are now being used as interventions for a variety of psychological and somatic illnesses. These benefits are thought to occur as a result of neurophysiologic changes. The most commonly studied specific meditation practices are focused attention (FA), open-monitoring (OM), as well as transcendental meditation (TM), and loving-kindness (LK) meditation. In this review, we compare the neural oscillatory patterns during these forms of meditation.Method: We performed a systematic review of neural oscillations during FA, OM, TM, and LK meditation practices, comparing meditators to meditation-naïve adults.Results: FA, OM, TM, and LK meditation are associated with global increases in oscillatory activity in meditators compared to meditation-naïve adults, with larger changes occurring as the length of meditation training increases. While FA and OM are related to increases in anterior theta activity, only FA is associated with changes in posterior theta oscillations. Alpha activity increases in posterior brain regions during both FA and OM. In anterior regions, FA shows a bilateral increase in alpha power, while OM shows a decrease only in left-sided power. Gamma activity in these meditation practices is similar in frontal regions, but increases are variable in parietal and occipital regions.Conclusions: The current literature suggests distinct differences in neural oscillatory activity among FA, OM, TM, and LK meditation practices. Further characterizing these oscillatory changes may better elucidate the cognitive and therapeutic effects of specific meditation practices, and potentially lead to the development of novel neuromodulation targets to take advantage of their benefits.http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2018.00178/fullmeditationEEGMEGfocused attentionopen-monitoringtranscendental
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Darrin J. Lee
Edwin Kulubya
Philippe Goldin
Amir Goodarzi
Fady Girgis
spellingShingle Darrin J. Lee
Edwin Kulubya
Philippe Goldin
Amir Goodarzi
Fady Girgis
Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation
Frontiers in Neuroscience
meditation
EEG
MEG
focused attention
open-monitoring
transcendental
author_facet Darrin J. Lee
Edwin Kulubya
Philippe Goldin
Amir Goodarzi
Fady Girgis
author_sort Darrin J. Lee
title Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation
title_short Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation
title_full Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation
title_fullStr Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation
title_full_unstemmed Review of the Neural Oscillations Underlying Meditation
title_sort review of the neural oscillations underlying meditation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Neuroscience
issn 1662-453X
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Objective: Meditation is one type of mental training that has been shown to produce many cognitive benefits. Meditation practice is associated with improvement in concentration and reduction of stress, depression, and anxiety symptoms. Furthermore, different forms of meditation training are now being used as interventions for a variety of psychological and somatic illnesses. These benefits are thought to occur as a result of neurophysiologic changes. The most commonly studied specific meditation practices are focused attention (FA), open-monitoring (OM), as well as transcendental meditation (TM), and loving-kindness (LK) meditation. In this review, we compare the neural oscillatory patterns during these forms of meditation.Method: We performed a systematic review of neural oscillations during FA, OM, TM, and LK meditation practices, comparing meditators to meditation-naïve adults.Results: FA, OM, TM, and LK meditation are associated with global increases in oscillatory activity in meditators compared to meditation-naïve adults, with larger changes occurring as the length of meditation training increases. While FA and OM are related to increases in anterior theta activity, only FA is associated with changes in posterior theta oscillations. Alpha activity increases in posterior brain regions during both FA and OM. In anterior regions, FA shows a bilateral increase in alpha power, while OM shows a decrease only in left-sided power. Gamma activity in these meditation practices is similar in frontal regions, but increases are variable in parietal and occipital regions.Conclusions: The current literature suggests distinct differences in neural oscillatory activity among FA, OM, TM, and LK meditation practices. Further characterizing these oscillatory changes may better elucidate the cognitive and therapeutic effects of specific meditation practices, and potentially lead to the development of novel neuromodulation targets to take advantage of their benefits.
topic meditation
EEG
MEG
focused attention
open-monitoring
transcendental
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fnins.2018.00178/full
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