Cognition Improved By Mindfulness Meditation

Main Category: Psychology / Psychiatry
Also Included In: Complementary Medicine / Alternative Medicine;  Neurology / Neuroscience;  Conferences
Article Date: 16 Apr 2010 - 0:00 PDT

Current ratings for:
'Cognition Improved By Mindfulness Meditation'

Patient / Public:4 and a half stars

4.38 (13 votes)

Healthcare Prof:5 stars

4.67 (6 votes)

Article opinions: 1 posts

Some of us need regular amounts of coffee or other chemical enhancers to make us cognitively sharper. A newly published study suggests perhaps a brief bit of meditation would prepare us just as well.

While past research using neuroimaging technology has shown that meditation techniques can promote significant changes in brain areas associated with concentration, it has always been assumed that extensive training was required to achieve this effect. Though many people would like to boost their cognitive abilities, the monk-like discipline required seems like a daunting time commitment and financial cost for this benefit.

Surprisingly, the benefits may be achievable even without all the work. Though it sounds almost like an advertisement for a "miracle" weight-loss product, new research now suggests that the mind may be easier to cognitively train than we previously believed. Psychologists studying the effects of a meditation technique known as "mindfulness " found that meditation-trained participants showed a significant improvement in their critical cognitive skills (and performed significantly higher in cognitive tests than a control group) after only four days of training for only 20 minutes each day.

"In the behavioral test results, what we are seeing is something that is somewhat comparable to results that have been documented after far more extensive training," said Fadel Zeidan, a post-doctoral researcher at Wake Forest University School of Medicine, and a former doctoral student at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, where the research was conducted.

"Simply stated, the profound improvements that we found after just 4 days of meditation training are really surprising," Zeidan noted. "It goes to show that the mind is, in fact, easily changeable and highly influenced, especially by meditation."

The study appears in the April 2 issue of Consciousness and Cognition. Zeidan's co-authors are Susan K. Johnson, Zhanna David and Paula Goolkasian from the Department of Psychology at UNC Charlotte, and Bruce J. Diamond from William Patterson University. The research was also part of Zeidan's doctoral dissertation. The research will also be presented at the Cognitive Neuroscience Society's annual meeting in Montreal, April 17-20.

The experiment involved 63 student volunteers, 49 of whom completed the experiment. Participants were randomly assigned in approximately equivalent numbers to one of two groups, one of which received the meditation training while the other group listened for equivalent periods of time to a book (J.R.R. Tolkein's The Hobbit) being read aloud.

Prior to and following the meditation and reading sessions, the participants were subjected to a broad battery of behavioral tests assessing mood, memory, visual attention, attention processing, and vigilance.

Both groups performed equally on all measures at the beginning of the experiment. Both groups also improved following the meditation and reading experiences in measures of mood, but only the group that received the meditation training improved significantly in the cognitive measures. The meditation group scored consistently higher averages than the reading/listening group on all the cognitive tests and as much as ten times better on one challenging test that involved sustaining the ability to focus, while holding other information in mind.

"The meditation group did especially better on all the cognitive tests that were timed," Zeidan noted. "In tasks where participants had to process information under time constraints causing stress, the group briefly trained in mindfulness performed significantly better."

Particularly of note were the differing results on a "computer adaptive n-back task," where participants would have to correctly remember if a stimulus had been shown two steps earlier in a sequence. If the participant got the answer right, the computer would react by increasing the speed of the subsequent stimulus, further increasing the difficulty of the task. The meditation-trained group averaged aproximately10 consecutive correct answers, while the listening group averaged approximately one.

"Findings like these suggest that meditation's benefits may not require extensive training to be realized, and that meditation's first benefits may be associated with increasing the ability to sustain attention," Zeidan said.

"Further study is warranted," he stressed, noting that brain imaging studies would be helpful in confirming the brain changes that the behavioral tests seem to indicate, "but this seems to be strong evidence for the idea that we may be able to modify our own minds to improve our cognitive processing - most importantly in the ability to sustain attention and vigilance - within a week's time."

The meditation training involved in the study was an abbreviated "mindfulness" training regime modeled on basic "Shamatha skills" from a Buddhist meditation tradition, conducted by a trained facilitator. As described in the paper, "participants were instructed to relax, with their eyes closed, and to simply focus on the flow of their breath occurring at the tip of their nose. If a random thought arose, they were told to passively notice and acknowledge the thought and to simply let 'it' go, by bringing the attention back to the sensations of the breath." Subsequent training built on this basic model, teaching physical awareness, focus, and mindfulness with regard to distraction.

Zeidan likens the brief training the participants received to a kind of mental calisthenics that prepared their minds for cognitive activity.

"The simple process of focusing on the breath in a relaxed manner, in a way that teaches you to regulate your emotions by raising one's awareness of mental processes as they're happening is like working out a bicep, but you are doing it to your brain. Mindfulness meditation teaches you to release sensory events that would easily distract, whether it is your own thoughts or an external noise, in an emotion-regulating fashion. This can lead to better, more efficient performance on the intended task."

"This kind of training seems to prepare the mind for activity, but it's not necessarily permanent," Zeidan cautions. "This doesn't mean that you meditate for four days and you're done - you need to keep practicing."

The paper: "Mindfulness Meditation Improves Cognition: Evidence of Brief Mental Training"

Source:
James Hathaway
University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
Visit our psychology / psychiatry section for the latest news on this subject.
There are no references listed for this article.
Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

MLA
James Hathaway. "Cognition Improved By Mindfulness Meditation." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., 16 Apr. 2010. Web.
26 May. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/185580.php>

APA
James Hathaway. (2010, April 16). "Cognition Improved By Mindfulness Meditation." Medical News Today. Retrieved from
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/185580.php.

Please note: If no author information is provided, the source is cited instead.



Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

How Meditation Works And Why It Will Work For You

posted by Carol E. McMahon Ph.D. on 27 Jan 2012 at 7:04 am

Meditation methods are many and varied. Some are vocal like mantra meditation. Others, like concentration on breathing, are silent. Some methods sit, some move, some are done alone, others in groups. At first glance they seem to have nothing in common, but a closer look shows they do. All methods work in the same way. All share the same ‘active ingredient.’ It is attention.

Attention: Meditation’s Active Ingredient

Attention is common to all forms of meditation. Whether focused on breathing, a mantra, or bodily movement, attention makes meditation work. And how does attention make meditation work? It restores awareness.

Awareness: The Source Of Meditation’s Benefits

Decades of research now document benefits. Meditation has power to heal the stress ravaged mind, body and spirit. All such health benefits have their source in awareness.

How can awareness heal? Simply put, awareness makes us sane. Awareness by definition is contact with reality, and contact with reality is sanity itself. Full awareness is profound sanity – the enlightenment of legendary masters. Known in Hindu tradition as “perfect mental balance,” full awareness is “a balance of mind never upset by any event under the canopy of heaven.”

In meditation, as awareness grows, mental balance is restored. Progressively, life’s stress gives way to “a world of peace and ease.” But how can you be sure it will work for you? The answer here may surprise you.

Why Meditation Is Sure To Work For You

If you’re like most people, you feel you already have awareness. Most people would swear to being fully aware all the time. This feeling, though compelling, is mistaken. On average, awareness is extremely low.

I developed a series self-tests for measuring awareness. These open our eyes to the startling truth. The following “Spot Test” (from Straight Line Meditation) is one example.

Test Your Awareness: The Spot Test

Have you seen spots at the movies? Next time you go to a movie, see if you can notice spots appearing periodically in the corners of the screen. These spots are clearly visible to the aware eye. They are placed there as signals to projectionists to switch reels.

Odds are you’ve never seen them and chances are you won’t see them even knowing they are there. How can you miss what’s right before your eyes? We miss these spots because we’re not fully present; not all there; not aware. Instead we are carried away by our thinking mind. We’re lost in the movie.

In life, we’re lost in another movie – one of our own creation. We star in a mental movie that keeps us preoccupied and living in our heads. Rarely do we notice low awareness. We notice it only when we drive past our exit, or when someone says: “I just told you that” when we heard nothing. We have as little as five percent of full awareness on average - just enough to get by.

You can be sure meditation will work for you because meditation restores awareness, and awareness is what you (like the rest of us) need. “Pure, pristine awareness” is our essential nature in Tibetan tradition. It is “intelligent, radiant, and always awake.” It is “hidden within our own mind, obscured by the mental scurry of thoughts and emotions.” But just as clouds can be shifted by wind, meditation clears our heads. It reveals “the shining sun and wide open sky – the light of understanding, meaning and freedom.” Awareness liberates, and such liberation is the source of the happiness we seek.

Awareness And Happiness: Why Awareness Is What You Need

Some who meditate report a strange realization. They describe “remembering they are happy.” The insight feels like waking from a troubled dream surprised to find you are safe at home and on vacation. This is how it feels to return to sanity: to become aware. Become aware and your eyes open to beauty, your senses to pleasure, your mind to truth and your heart to love. Become aware and happiness comes free.

Thus there’s a simple way to pursue happiness, simpler by far than we’ve ever known. “Having it all” is not what it takes. Awareness is all you need.

| post followup | alert a moderator |


Add Your Opinion On This Article

'Cognition Improved By Mindfulness Meditation'

Please note that we publish your name, but we do not publish your email address. It is only used to let you know when your message is published. We do not use it for any other purpose. Please see our privacy policy for more information.

If you write about specific medications or operations, please do not name health care professionals by name.

All opinions are moderated before being included (to stop spam)

Your Name:*
E-mail Address:*
Your Opinion Title:*
Opinion:*
This is to help prevent SPAM submissions. Please enter the words exactly as they appear, including capital letters and punctuation.*

* Fields marked with a * need to be filled in before you hit the submit button.

Contact Our News Editors

For any corrections of factual information, or to contact the editors please use our feedback form.

Please send any medical news or health news press releases to:

Note: Any medical information published on this website is not intended as a substitute for informed medical advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional. For more information, please read our terms and conditions.


Psychology / Psychiatry

What Is Psychology?

Psychology is the science of the mind and behavior. The word "psychology" comes from the Greek word psyche meaning "breath, spirit, soul", and the Greek word logia meaning the study of something. Read more...

Most Popular Articles



Follow Our Psychology News On Twitter

Follow Us On Twitter
Get the latest news for this category delivered straight to your Twitter account. Simply visit our Psychology / Psychiatry Twitter account and select the 'follow' option.



View list of all 'What Is...' articles »