Intensive Meditation Training Improves Perceptual Discrimination and Sustained Attention
University of California, Davis · University of California, Irvine
Abstract
The ability to focus one's attention underlies success in many everyday tasks, but voluntary attention cannot be sustained for extended periods of time. In the laboratory, sustained-attention failure is manifest as a decline in perceptual sensitivity with increasing time on task, known as the vigilance decrement. We investigated improvements in sustained attention with training (approximately 5 hr/day for 3 months), which consisted of meditation practice that involved sustained selective attention on a chosen stimulus (e.g., the participant's breath). Participants were randomly assigned either to receive training first (n = 30) or to serve as waiting-list controls and receive training second (n = 30). Training…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 22.40
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 46
Authors
13Topics & keywords
- Vigilance (psychology)
- Psychology
- Meditation
- Perception
- Stimulus (psychology)
- Cognitive psychology
- Visual attention
- Audiology