BOSTON - November 11, 2005 - The regular practice of meditation appears
to produce structural changes in areas of the brain associated with
attention and sensory processing. An imaging study led by Massachusetts
General Hospital (MGH) researchers showed that particular areas of the
cerebral cortex, the outer layer of the brain, were thicker in
participants who were experienced practitioners of a type of meditation
commonly practiced in the U.S. and other Western countries. The article
appears in the Nov. 15 issue of NeuroReport, and the research also is
being presented Nov. 14 at the Society for Neuroscience meeting in
Washington, DC.
"Our results suggest that meditation can produce experience-based
structural alterations in the brain," says Sara Lazar, PhD, of the MGH
Psychiatric Neuroimaging Research Program, the study's lead author. "We
also found evidence that mediation may slow down the aging-related
atrophy of certain areas of the brain."
Studies have shown that mediation can produce alterations in brain
activity, and meditation practitioners have described changes in mental
function that last long after actual meditation ceases, implying
long-term effects. However, those studies usually examined Buddhist
monks who practiced mediation as a central focus of their lives.
To investigate whether meditation as typically practiced in the U.S.
could change the brain's structure, the current study enrolled 20
practitioners of Buddhist Insight meditation - which focuses on
"mindfulness," a specific, nonjudgmental awareness of sensations,
feelings and state of mind. They averaged nine years of mediation
experience and practiced about six hours per week. For comparison, 15
people with no experience of meditation or yoga were enrolled as
controls.
Using standard MRI to produce detailed images of the structure of
participants' brains, the researchers found that regions involved in
the mental activities that characterize Insight meditation were thicker
in the meditators than in the controls, the first evidence that
alterations in brain structure may be associated with meditation. They
also found that, in an area associated with the integration of
emotional and cognitive processes, differences in cortical thickness
were more pronounced in older participants, suggesting that meditation
could reduce the thinning of the cortex that typically occurs with
aging.
"The area where we see these differences is involved in both the
modulation of functions like heart rate and breathing and also the
integration of emotion with thought and reward-based decision making -
a central switchboard of the brain," says Lazar. An instructor in
Psychology at Harvard Medical School, she also stresses that the
results of such a small study need to be validated by larger,
longer-term studies.
Massachusetts General Hospital News Release
11 November 2005
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