Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Your Brain Needs Yoga Too

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Jul, 2017 01:11 PM
    In recent years, there has been a sharp increase in international research on meditation and the findings may not be what you expect. 
     
     
    Although the options are many, the purpose is basically the same: more peace, less stress, better concentration, greater self-awareness and better processing of thoughts and feelings.
     
    A research team at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), the University of Oslo and the University of Sydney have worked to determine how the brain works during different types of meditation.
     
     
    Meditation techniques can be divided into two main groups. One type is concentrative meditation, where you focus attention on your breathing or on specific thoughts, and in doing so, suppresses other thoughts.
     
    The other type can be called nondirective meditation, where you effortlessly focus on your breathing or on a meditation sound, but beyond that the mind is allowed to wander as it pleases.
     
     
    Although according to the team, the research still reveals very little about which technique is the best, or better, it still provides food for thought about the increasingly popular concept of meditation.
     
     
     
    Fourteen people, who had extensive experience with the Norwegian technique Acem meditation, were tested in an MRI machine. In addition to simple resting, they undertook two different mental meditation activities, nondirective meditation and a more concentrative meditation task.
     
     
    Nondirective meditation led to higher activity than during rest in the part of the brain dedicated to processing self-related thoughts and feelings. When test subjects performed concentrative meditation, the activity in this part of the brain was almost the same as when they were just resting.
     
     
    "I was surprised that the activity of the brain was greatest when the person's thoughts wandered freely on their own, rather than when the brain worked to be more strongly focused," said Jian Xu, who is a physician at St. Olavs Hospital and a researcher at the Department of Circulation and Medical Imaging at NTNU.
     
     
     
    Adding, "When the subjects stopped doing a specific task and were not really doing anything special, there was an increase in activity in the area of the brain where we process thoughts and feelings. It is described as a kind of resting network. And it was this area that was most active during nondirective meditation."
     
     
    "The study indicates that nondirective meditation allows for more room to process memories and emotions than during concentrated meditation," says Svend Davanger, a neuroscientist at the University of Oslo, and co-author of the study.
     
    "This area of the brain has its highest activity when we rest. It represents a kind of basic operating system, a resting network that takes over when external tasks do not require our attention. It is remarkable that a mental task like nondirective meditation results in even higher activity in this network than regular rest," added Davanger.
     
     
     
    NTNU is a world-class research hub in the medical sciences, especially neuroscience and study of the brain. Nobel prize winners May-Britt and Edvard Moser, who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2014 with their mentor John O'Keefe for their work identifying the place cells that make up the brain's positioning system, are directors of the Kavli Institute for Systems Neuroscience department under the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at NTNU

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Montreal Woman Who Falsely Claimed Rape Gets 15 Months In The Community

    Montreal Woman Who Falsely Claimed Rape Gets 15 Months In The Community
      Carole Thomas will be under house arrest for the first eight months but will be allowed to go to work and attend medical appointments.

    Montreal Woman Who Falsely Claimed Rape Gets 15 Months In The Community

    Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success

    Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success
     YouTube has emerged as a break-out star in Google's cast of services as the online video site upstages cable television for a younger generation of viewers looking for amusement, news and music on their smartphones.

    Rising Star: YouTube Playing Key Role In Google's Success

    Police Release Picture Of Indiana Mom Overdosed On Heroin As An 'Educational Tool'

    Police Release Picture Of Indiana Mom Overdosed On Heroin As An 'Educational Tool'
    Authorities in the US state of Indiana has released shocking pictures of a mother found overdosed behind the wheel and her 10-month-old son crying in the back seat to raise awareness about the growing heroin epidemic.

    Police Release Picture Of Indiana Mom Overdosed On Heroin As An 'Educational Tool'

    Haryana Girl Who Reported About Her Father Burning Stubble To Be Rewarded

    Haryana Girl Who Reported About Her Father Burning Stubble To Be Rewarded
    The Haryana State Pollution Control Board has decided to honour and reward a girl from Jind district for reporting the case of stubble burning by her father to the authorities.

    Haryana Girl Who Reported About Her Father Burning Stubble To Be Rewarded

    Man Renames Himself iPhone 7 To Win The Phone

    Man Renames Himself iPhone 7 To Win The Phone
    A Ukrainian man has officially changed his name to iPhone 7 after an electronics store offered the latest Apple product to the first five people who do that.

    Man Renames Himself iPhone 7 To Win The Phone

    Trunk Or Treat, Switch Witchery, Teal Pumpkins: How Some Are Rethinking Halloween

    Trunk Or Treat, Switch Witchery, Teal Pumpkins: How Some Are Rethinking Halloween
    Aviva Allen and her two children will not be out tricking-or-treating in their Toronto neighbourhood this Halloween.

    Trunk Or Treat, Switch Witchery, Teal Pumpkins: How Some Are Rethinking Halloween