冥想
脑电图
大脑活动与冥想
佛教
心理学
特质
心率变异性
静息状态功能磁共振成像
心率
心跳
神经科学
听力学
作者
Xiaoli Guo,Meiyun Wang,Xu Wang,Menglin Guo,Ting Xue,Zhuo Wang,Han Li,Tianjiao Xu,Bin He,Donghong Cui,Shanbao Tong
出处
期刊:Cerebral Cortex
[Oxford University Press]
日期:2021-12-31
卷期号:32 (18): 3865-3877
被引量:2
标识
DOI:10.1093/cercor/bhab453
摘要
Abstract Meditation has been a spiritual and healing practice in the East for thousands of years. However, the neurophysiologic mechanisms underlying its traditional form remain unclear. In this study, we recruited a large sample of monks (n = 73) who practice Tibetan Buddhist meditation and compared with meditation-naive local controls (n = 30). Their electroencephalography (EEG) and electrocardiogram signals were simultaneously recorded and blood samples were collected to investigate the integrative effects of Tibetan Buddhist on brain, heart, and proteomics. We found that the EEG activities in monks shifted to a higher frequency from resting to meditation. Meditation starts with decrease of the (pre)frontal delta activity and increase of the (pre)frontal high beta and gamma activity; while at the deep meditative state, the posterior high-frequency activity was also increased, and could be specified as a biomarker for the deep meditation. The state increase of posterior high-frequency EEG activity was significantly correlated with the trait effects on heart rate and nueropilin-1 in monks, with the source of brain–heart correlation mainly locating in the attention and emotion networks. Our study revealed that the effects of Tibetan Buddhist meditation on brain, heart, and proteomics were highly correlated, demonstrating meditation as an integrative body–mind training.
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