Long-term meditators self-induce high-amplitude gamma synchrony during mental practice
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Practitioners understand "meditation," or mental training, to be a process of familiarization with one's own mental life leading to long-lasting changes in cognition and emotion. Little is known about this process and its impact on the brain. Here we find that long-term Buddhist practitioners self-induce sustained electroencephalographic high-amplitude gamma-band oscillations and phase-synchrony during meditation. These electroencephalogram patterns differ from those of controls, in particular over lateral frontoparietal electrodes. In addition, the ratio of gamma-band activity (25-42 Hz) to slow oscillatory activity (4-13 Hz) is initially higher in the resting baseline before meditation for the practitioners…
Citation impact
1,306
total citations
- FWCI
- 12.91
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 34
Citations per year
Authors
5Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Meditation
- Electroencephalography
- Psychology
- Audiology
- Cognition
- Scalp
- Term (time)
- Neuroscience
No related works found for this paper.