Cannabis Indica

Authors
Antoine Lutz, Lawrence L Greischar, Nancy B Rawlings, Matthieu Ricard, Richard J Davidson
Publication date
2004/11/16
Journal
Proceedings of the national Academy of Sciences
Volume
101
Issue
46
Pages
16369-16373
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
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 than the controls over medial frontoparietal electrodes. This difference increases sharply during meditation over most of the scalp electrodes and remains higher than the initial baseline in the postmeditation baseline …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Lutz, LL Greischar, NB Rawlings, M Ricard… - Proceedings of the national Academy of Sciences, 2004

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