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Researchers Discover that Meditation Builds up the Brain (Photo)
(Clearwisdom.net) According to a report from New Scientist on
November 15, 2005, researchers have found that meditation does more than just
feel good and calm you down, it makes you perform better - and alters the
structure of your brain. A group of researchers from the University of Kentucky in Lexington made the
conclusion based on their recent experiments. They used a well-established
"psychomotor vigilance task", which has long been used to quantify the
effects of sleepiness on mental acuity. The test involves staring at an LCD
screen and pressing a button as soon as an image pops up. Typically, people take
200 to 300 milliseconds to respond, but sleep-deprived people take much longer,
and sometimes miss the stimulus altogether. Ten volunteers were tested before
and after 40 minutes of either sleep, meditation, reading or light conversation,
with all subjects trying all conditions. The 40-minute nap was known to improve
performance (after an hour or so to recover from grogginess). But what
astonished the researchers was that meditation was the only intervention that
immediately led to superior performance, despite none of the volunteers being
experienced at meditation. "Every single subject showed improvement," says O'Hara, one of the
researchers. The improvement was even more dramatic after a night without sleep.
But, he admits: "Why it improves performance, we do not know." The
team is now studying experienced meditators, who spend several hours each day in
practice. Brain builder What effect meditating has on the structure of the brain has also been a
matter of some debate. Now Sara Lazar at the Massachusetts General Hospital in
Boston, US, and colleagues have used MRI to compare 15 meditators, with
experience ranging from 1 to 30 years, and 15 non-meditators. They found that meditating actually increases the thickness of the cortex in
areas involved in attention and sensory processing, such as the prefrontal
cortex and the right anterior insula. "You are exercising it while you meditate, and it gets bigger," she
says. The finding is in line with studies showing that accomplished musicians,
athletes and linguists all have thickening in relevant areas of the cortex. Reference: http://www.newscientist.com/channel/being-human/dn8317.html
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