Judul asli:
Brain Scans Reveal Why Meditation Works      By Melinda Wenner, Special to 
LiveScience
source: http://www.livescience.com/health/070629_naming_emotions.html

 If you name your emotions, you can tame them, according to new research that 
suggests why meditation works. 
  Brain scans show that putting negative emotions into words calms the brain's 
emotion center. That could explain meditation’s purported emotional benefits, 
because people who meditate often label their negative emotions in an effort to 
“let them go.” 
 Psychologists have long believed that people who talk about their feelings 
have more control over them, but they don't know why it works. 
 UCLA psychologist Matthew Lieberman and his colleagues hooked 30 people up to 
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) machines, which scan the brain to 
reveal which parts are active and inactive at any given moment. 
  They asked the subjects to look at pictures of male or female faces making 
emotional expressions. Below some of the photos was a choice of words 
describing the emotion—such as “angry” or “fearful”—or two possible names for 
the people in the pictures, one male name and one female name. 
  When presented with these choices, the subjects were asked to pick the most 
appropriate emotion  or gender-appropriate name to fit the face they saw. 
  When the participants chose labels for the negative emotions, activity in the 
right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex region—an area associated with thinking 
in words about emotional experiences—became more active, whereas activity in 
the amygdala, a brain region involved in emotional processing, was calmed. 
  By contrast, when the subjects picked appropriate names for the faces, the 
brain scans revealed none of these changes—indicating that only emotional 
labeling makes a difference. 
  “In the same way you hit the brake when you’re driving when you see a yellow 
light, when you put feelings into words, you seem to be hitting the brakes on 
your emotional responses,” Lieberman said of his study, which is detailed in 
the current issue of Psychological Science. 
  In a second experiment, 27 of the same subjects completed questionnaires to 
determine how “mindful” they are. 
  Meditation and other “mindfulness” techniques are designed to help people pay 
more attention to their present emotions, thoughts  and sensations without 
reacting strongly to them. Meditators often acknowledge and name their negative 
emotions in order to “let them go.” 
  When the team compared brain scans from subjects who had more mindful 
dispositions to those from subjects who were less mindful, they found a stark 
difference—the mindful subjects experienced greater activation in the right 
ventrolateral prefrontral cortex and a greater calming effect in the amygdala 
after labeling their emotions. 
  “These findings may help explain the beneficial health effects of mindfulness 
meditation, and suggest, for the first time, an underlying reason why 
mindfulness meditation programs improve mood and health,” said David Creswell, 
a UCLA psychologist who led the second part of the study, which will be 
detailed in Psychosomatic Medicine. 
YG

Check this out:

http://www.scn.ucla.edu/meditation.html
http://www.scn.ucla.edu/pdf/Creswell2007.pdf
The skillful use of labeling during satipatthana (mindful) contemplation can 
help strengthen clear recognition and understanding. At the same time, labeling 
introduces a healthy degree of inner detachment, since the act of apostrophizing
one's moods and emotions diminishes one's identification with them.       
Analayo, from Satipatthana.

http://www.scn.ucla.edu/AL.html
http://www.scn.ucla.edu/pdf/sciamer_AL.pdf
http://www.scn.ucla.edu/pdf/AL(2007).pdf

       
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