THIỀN TÁNH KHÔNG VÀ CÔNG TRÌNH KIỂM CHỨNG THỰC NGHIỆM TÁC DỤNG CỦA THIỀN TRÊN HỆ THỐNG NÃO BỘ
Poster Triển Lãm tại Đại Hội Khoa Học Gia Thế Giới
Tây Ban Nha - June 06, 2010

Neuroelectric
and Hemodynamic Correlates of Śūnyatā Meditation
- Combined fMRI-EEG Study

RANGANATHA SITARAM 1,
MICHAEL ERB 2, ADRIAN FURDEA 1,
QUANG CHIEU NGUYEN VAN HUNG 3, MASTER THICH THONG TRIET 4
1 Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral
Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Germany
2 Section Experimental MR of the CNS, Department of
Neuroradiology, University Hospital, Tuebingen, Germany
3 Śūnyatā Meditation Center, Perris, CA, USA
4 Śūnyatā Meditation Stuttgart e.V., Germany
Corresponding author: sitaram.ranganatha@uni-tuebingen.de
INTRODUCTION
The word meditation describes practices that
self-regulate the body and mind. Śūnyatā (Sanskrit - emptiness)
meditation stems from the Buddhist philosophy that signifies the
impermanent nature of form; meaning that objects in the world do
not possess essential or enduring properties. In Buddhist spiritual
teaching, cultivating insight into the emptiness leads to wisdom
and inner peace. Śūnyatā meditation practice is aimed to develop an
ability to avoid discursive (wandering, long-winded) thought, and
instead acquire insight into the nature of reality through direct
perception of the internal (bodily) and external (sensory) states.
AIM and
HYPOTHESES
The aim of the present study was to investigate state
changes in the brain and physiology during Śūnyatā meditation when
participants are confronted with a variety of external stimuli: visual,
auditory and tactile. Based on the rationale behind the Śūnyatā
practice,
we hypothesized that the following state changes occur during meditation
in comparison to normal day-to-day thinking:
- Memory retrieval, planning and executive control areas of the brain
will be deactivated;
- Brain areas related to interoception and sensory perception will be
activated.
MATERIALS
and METHODS
Participants:
Experienced Meditators
Participants included the Śūnyatā meditation master
Thich Thong Triet (age: 80 years, years of meditation experience >
30, meditates 7
hours per day), 2 other expert monks and 2 expert nuns (mean age: 70
years, years of meditation experience > 15, meditate 4 hours per
day), and 2 more
intermediate practitioners (mean age: 50 years, years of meditation
experience > 5, meditate 1 hours per day).
Experimental
Protocol
The experimental protocol comprised of 3 blocks of
baseline, normal day-to-day discursive thinking (duration=2min) and 2
blocks of meditation
(duration=3min) alternating with one another. Four methods of
meditation, namely, absolute seeing, absolute hearing, absolute touch
and absolute cognition
were measured in separate sessions, with the above protocol, in
accompaniment with visual, auditory, touch stimuli and no stimuli,
respectively. Identical
stimuli were presented in the baseline and meditation blocks to
tease-out the influence of meditation practice on brain activations.

In an addition, four different levels of meditation
depths as described in Buddhism were investigated, namely:
- Verbal awareness
- Tacit awareness,
- Awakening awareness
- Cognitive awareness. These measurements were performed in the same
block design as above.
fMRI, EEG
and Physiological Measurements


A standard echo-planar imaging (EPI) sequence on a 3T
whole body scanner (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany) with the following
parameters was used: TR=3000ms,
TE=40ms, number of slices=36. For superposition of functional maps upon
brain anatomy a high-resolution T1-weighted structural scan of the whole
brain was collected
from each subject. The above protocols were repeated in different days
(5) in a series of measurements spanning 3 years, with the last session
utilized for simultaneous
measurement of EEG (with BrainAmps MR compatible amplifier and EEG cap)
and fMRI. In addition, pulse and respiration were measured and at the
end of each run, meditators
were requested to make subjective ratings of depth of meditation they
achieved in each block of meditation.
RESULTS
fMRI
Results - Group Independent Component Analysis Results


Common activations and deactivations across
meditation types:
- Activation in bilateral Precuneus, implicated in self-processing and
consciousness (Cavanna 2007).
- Activation in the bilateral insula, implicated in interoception
(Craig, 2008).
- Deactivation in frontopolar region of the brain, namely, BA-10,
involved in strategic processes including memory retrieval and executive
function.
- Deactivation in the Posterior Cingulate, implicated consistently in
the default network of brain function (Raichle, 2000).
Meditation
type specific activations:
- Enhanced activation of the fusiform gyrus (FFG) during absolute
cognition meditation,
- Enhanced activation of the right rolandic operculum and inferior
frontal gyrus (BA 47) during the absolute hearing meditation,
- Enhanced activation of the visual cortex during the absolute seeing
meditation, and
- Enhanced somatosensation during the absolute touch meditation.

Analysis of different meditation levels shows a
decrease of activations in the left and right superior temporal gyrus
(STG) and an increase of activation in the
left higher visual areas (BA 18/19), the right inferior frontal gyrus
(IFG) and the right insula.
EEG
Results
Absolute
Seeing Meditation

Meditation of the different senses, namely, absolute
seeing, hearing and touch showed increased alpha power in duration
meditation compared to normal thinking in the occipital,
temporal and sensorimotor regions, respectively, in congruence to the
fMRI results.
CONCLUSIONS
Our results show that Śūnyatā meditation enhances
perception of external stimuli and interoception (of internal bodily
states) as shown by heightened activations in sensory
areas and insula when compared to the normal, day-to-day thinking state.
This type of meditation reduces discursive thought as shown by a
consistent deactivation of the the BA-10 involved in
memory retrieval, planning and executive function.
References
- Cahn, R., & Polich, J. Meditation States and Traits: EEG, ERP,
and Neuroimaging Studies. Psychological Bulletin.
- Austin, J. H. (2006). Zen-Brain Reflections. Reviewing Recent
Developments in Meditation and Consciousness. Cambridge, MA: The MIT
Press.
Original printed poster (PDF, 3 Mbytes)