--- In [email protected], cardemaister <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
> 
> Are (real) siddhas immune to this optical illusion?
> 
> http://www.saunalahti.fi/~ehei/strange1.jpg

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4613759.stm

Meditation 'brain training' clues  
 
Meditating monks are giving clues about how the brain's basic 
responses can be overridden, researchers say. 

Australian scientists gave Buddhist monks vision tests, where each 
eye was concurrently shown a different image. 

Most people's attention would automatically fluctuate - but the 
monks were able to focus on just one image. 

Writing in Current Biology, the scientists say their ability to 
override this basic mental response indicates how the brain can be 
trained. 

Researchers from the University of Queensland and the University of 
California, Berkley, studied 76 Tibetan Buddhist monks at mountain 
retreats in India. 

The monks had undergone between five and 54 years of meditative 
training. 

In the tests, they were given special goggles that meant they could 
see a different image with each eye. 

Normally, the brain would rapidly alternate between both - termed 
perceptual or visual rivalry. 

It had been thought that this was a basic and involuntary response. 

'Move on' 

However, the monks - who carried out "one-point" meditation, where 
they focus attention on a single object or thought - were able to 
focus on one image. 

Monks who had undergone the longest and most intense meditative 
training were able to focus their attention on just one of the 
images for up to 12 minutes. 

Olivia Carter, of the University of Queensland, said: "The monks 
showed they were able to block out external information. 

"This is an initial step in understanding how their brains work. 

"It would now be good to carry out further tests using imaging 
techniques to see exactly what the differences are in the brains of 
the monks." 

She said that could direct researchers to a broader understanding of 
how meditation influences what happens in the brain when someone is 
deciding whether to give something their attention, and what happens 
when they choose not to dwell on bad news, or to calm down. 

Ms Carter added: "Buddhist monks often report that if something 
negative happens they are able to digest it and move on. 

"People who use meditation, including the Dalai Lama have said that 
the ability to control and direct your thoughts can be very 
beneficial in terms of mental health." 

Dr Toby Collins, of the Oxford Centre for the Science of the Mind, 
told the BBC News website: "Meditation is a way of tapping into a 
process of manipulating brain activity." 

He said the idea that meditation trained the brain to attend to just 
one thing at a time fitted in with previous research. 

He added: "How that's done, we don't yet know. But studies using 
fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) can show what's 
happening in the brain." 
 





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