Meditation and the Brain
Writing by bwerner on Sunday, 7 of September , 2008 at 4:08 pm
Hi, I’m back, it was a long time since my last post but now I’m here again and it will continue with my post like before. Since I’ll convince you to practice Meditation my first post is about that.
Hi, I’m back, it was a long time since my last post but now I’m here again and it will continue with my post like before. Since I’ll convince you to practice Meditation my first post is about that.
Mindfulness meditation and related techniques are intended to train attention for the sake of provoking insight. Think of it as the opposite of attention deficit disorder. A wider, more flexible attention span makes it easier to be aware of a situation, easier to be objective in emotionally or morally difficult situations, and easier to achieve a state of responsive, creative awareness or “flow“.
One theory, presented by Daniel Goleman & Tara Bennett-Goleman (2001), suggests that meditation works because of the relationship between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex. In very simple terms, the amygdala is the part of the brain that decides if we should get angry or anxious (among other things), and the pre-frontal cortex is the part that makes us stop and think about things (it is also known as the inhibitory centre).
Some studies of meditation have linked the practice to increased activity in the left prefrontal cortex, which is associated with concentration, planning, meta-cognition (thinking about thinking), and positive affect (good feelings). There are similar studies linking depression and anxiety with decreased activity in the same region, and/or with dominant activity in the right prefrontal cortex. Meditation increases activity in the left prefrontal cortex, and the changes are stable over time — even if you stop meditating for a while, the effect lingers.
Taken fom Wikipedia
To read more about Meditaion and Yoga go to my website
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Category: Meditation, Personal Development, Psychology, Science
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