whilst they meditate they are quiet and can do no evil deeds...
the benefits are huge for the human race... 
the question remains..
how are you going to convince the very "fruity cases" that need quietening down 
to practise meditation?...
after all most of the time its preaching to the all ready converted...
 the war mongers  and super ego freaks are still loose creating chaos in this 
world... 
merle

>
>A neural basis for benefits of 
meditationFebruary 13th, 2013 in Psychology & 
Psychiatry 
>Magnetoencephalographic studies show that people who have 
been trained in mindfulness have quicker and larger changes in alpha wave 
amplitude when they shift focus. Credit: Mike Cohea/Brown University Credit: 
Mike Cohea/Brown University 
>
>
>Why does training in mindfulness meditation help 
patients manage chronic pain and depression? In a newly published 
neurophysiological review, Brown University scientists propose that mindfulness 
practitioners gain enhanced control over sensory cortical alpha rhythms that 
help regulate how the brain processes and filters sensations, including pain, 
and memories such as depressive cognitions.
>The proposal, based on published experimental results and 
a validated computer simulation of neural networks, derives its mechanistic 
framework from the intimate connection in mindfulness between mind and body, 
since standardized mindfulness meditation training begins with a highly 
localized focus on body and breath sensations. This repeated localized sensory 
focus, the scientists write, enhances control over localized alpha rhythms in 
the primary somatosensory cortex where sensations from different body are 
"mapped" by the brain.
>In effect, what the researchers propose in their paper in Frontiers in Human 
>Neuroscience, is that by learning to control their 
focus on the present somatic moment, mindfulness meditators develop a more 
sensitive "volume knob" for controlling spatially specific, localized sensory 
cortical alpha rhythms. Efficient modulation of cortical alpha rhythms in turn 
enables optimal filtering of sensory information. Meditators learn not only to 
control what specific body sensations they pay attention to, but also how to 
regulate attention so that it does not become biased toward negative physical 
sensations such as chronic pain. The localized attentional control of 
somatosensory alpha rhythms becomes generalized to better regulate bias toward 
internally focused negative thoughts, as in depression.
>"We think we're the first group to propose an underlying 
neurophysiological mechanism that directly links the actual practice of mindful 
awareness of breath and body sensations to the kinds of cognitive and emotional 
benefits that mindfulness confers," said lead author Catherine Kerr, assistant 
professor (research) of family medicine at the Alpert Medical School and 
director of translational neuroscience for the Contemplative Studies Initiative 
at Brown.
>Experimental evidence
>In experiments that Kerr and neuroscientist co-authors 
Stephanie Jones and Christopher Moore have published over the last few years, 
the team has used a brain imaging technology called magnetoencephalography 
(MEG) 
to show that alpha rhythms in the cortex correlate with sensory attention and 
that the ability to regulate localized alpha brainwaves on a millisecond scale 
is more distinct in people who have had standardized mindfulness training than 
in those who have not. The trio led these experiments at the Massachusetts 
Institute of Technology, Harvard, and Massachusettes General Hospital before 
they all came to Brown in 2011.
>In one experiment published in the Journal of 
Neuroscience in 2010, they observed that when people focused their attention 
on sensations in the left hand, the corresponding "map" for the hand in the 
cortex showed a marked drop in alpha wave amplitude (as if to reduce filtering 
there). When the subjects' attention shifted away from that body part, the 
alpha 
rhythm amplitude in the corresponding brain map went back up (as if restoring 
the alpha filter). Other research groups have shown this to be the case for 
other kinds of attention-related tasks including focusing spatial attention and 
working memory.
>Then in 2011 in Brain Research Bulletin, the team 
published another paper. They randomized subjects to eight weeks of mindfulness 
training versus a control group. In MEG, they asked members of each group to 
focus attention on sensations in their hand and then to switch their attention 
to their foot. The people trained in mindfulness displayed quicker and larger 
changes in alpha wave amplitude in their brain's hand map when they made the 
attentional shift than the six people who did not have mindfulness 
training.
>Mindful computational model
>In addition to the emerging experimental evidence, the 
research framework is also informed by a computer model that Jones has 
developed 
to simulate the alpha brainwaves through reciprocal interactions between the 
cortex, which processes information and thoughts, and the thalamus, which is 
like a switchboard that mediates information flow from the rest of the brain to 
the cortex. The model is well validated in that it produces alpha rhythms that 
closely match those observed in live MEG scans of real subjects.
>Jones, assistant professor (research) of neuroscience, did 
not originally develop the model to aid meditation research.
>"We were investigating what are the brain mechanisms that 
can create this prominent alpha rhythm and mediate its impact on sensory 
processing," Jones said. "The model simulates the electrical activity of neural 
networks and makes very specific predictions about how this rhythm is 
generated. 
Once we understand the brain processes regulating alpha rhythm expression, we 
can better understand how it can be modulated with mindfulness practice and why 
this is beneficial."
>Among the most important predictions is one that could 
explain how gaining control of alpha rhythms not only enhances sensory focus on 
a particular area of the body, but also helps people overcome persistent 
competing stimuli, such as depressive thoughts or chronic pain 
signals.
>To accomplish this, the model predicts, meditators must 
achieve proper control over the relative timing and strength of alpha rhythms 
generated from two separate regions of the thalamus, called thalamic nuclei, 
that talk to different parts of the cortex. One alpha generator would govern 
the 
local "tuning in," for instance of sensations in a hand, while the other would 
govern the broader "tuning out" of other sensory or cognitive information in 
the 
cortex.
>It's a bit like focusing a telescope by precisely aligning 
the position of two different lenses. The authors' framework hypothesizes that 
experienced meditators gain the ability to turn that proverbial focus knob to 
align those different rhythms.
>Working with the framework
>In the new paper the authors propose that training chronic 
pain patients in the standardized mindfulness techniques of focusing on and 
then 
focusing away from pain, should result in MEG-measurable, testable improvements 
in alpha rhythm control.
>"By this process of repeatedly engaging and disengaging 
alpha dynamics across the body map, according to our alpha theory, subjects are 
re-learning the process of directly modulating localized alpha rhythms," they 
wrote. "We hypothesize that chronic pain patients trained in mindfulness will 
show increased ability to modulate alpha in an anticipatory tactile attention 
paradigm similar to that used in [the 2011 study]."
>Many such experiments are yet to be done, Kerr 
acknowledges, and her group can only do so many.
>"There are a number of hypotheses in this framework that 
can be tested," Kerr said. "That's one of the reasons we wanted to put this out 
as a framework. It is beyond our ability to test all of these ideas. We wanted 
to make this available to the scientific field and present this unified 
view."
>Provided by Brown University
>"A neural basis for benefits of meditation." February 
13th, 2013. 
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2013-02-neural-basis-benefits-meditation.html

 

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