| Literature DB >> 25846954 |
Kevanne Louise Sanger1, Dusana Dorjee.
Abstract
Mindfulness training is increasingly being introduced in schools, yet studies examining its impact on the developing brain have been scarce. A neurodevelopmental perspective on mindfulness has been advocated as a powerful tool to enhance our understanding of underlying neurocognitive changes that have implications for developmental well-being research and the implementation of mindfulness in education. To stimulate more research in the developmental cognitive neuroscience of mindfulness, this article outlines possible indexes of mindfulness-based change in adolescence, with a focus on event-related brain potential (ERP) markers. We provide methodological recommendations for future studies and offer examples of research paradigms. We also discuss how mindfulness practice could impact on the development of prefrontal brain structures and enhance attention control and emotion regulation skills in adolescents, impacting in turn on their self-regulation and coping skills. We highlight advantages of the ERP methodology in neurodevelopmental research of mindfulness. It is proposed that research using established experimental tasks targeting ERP components such as the contingent negative variability, N200, error-related negativity and error positivity, P300, and late positive potential could elucidate developmentally salient shifts in the neural plasticity of the adolescent brain induced by mindfulness practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25846954 PMCID: PMC4526594 DOI: 10.3758/s13415-015-0354-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1530-7026 Impact factor: 3.282
ERP components of interest and corresponding research summary table
| Event-Related Potential | Definition | Experimental Paradigm / Task | Adolescent Patterns | Adult Patterns | Predictions for Adolescents Trained in Mindfulness Practices |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contingent negative variation (CNV) | A slow-building negative waveform that emerges in the period between a warning and imperative stimuli. It has a frontal/central distribution, and signals preparatory motor activity, sensory anticipation, and the activation of attention (Walter et al., | • Priming task with informative and noninformative warning stimuli (primes) | • Killikelly and Szucs ( | • Bostanov et al. ( | • The CNV can detect facilitation of anticipatory attention processes after mindfulness interventions, as indicated by converging evidence on developmental CNV modulation in adolescents (Killikelly & Szucs, |
| Visual N2 | The visual N2 is a negative deflection with frontal/central distribution, and it signals task-specific inhibition (Falkenstein et al., | • Inhibition or detection task | • Chapman et al. ( | • Moore et al. ( | • More negative N2 amplitudes could be expected after mindfulness training in adolescent populations, reflecting more mature patterns of inhibition (Chapman et al., |
| P300 | The P300 (P3 family of positive components) is elicited in response to salient stimulus events, thus allocating mental resources to attention and memory operations associated with stimulus processing (Polich, | • Focused attention and executive tasks | • Brumback et al. ( | • Slagter et al. ( | • Attentional-blink paradigm is a possible ERP marker to map the development of orientating and alerting performance in adolescents, and could be particularly useful in relation to high impulsivity (Ray Li et al., |
| Error-related negativity (ERN) and error positivity (Pe) | ERN is a negative deflection over fronto-central sites, signifying attention to an error deviating from goal-directed behavior (Falkenstein et al., | • Any task requiring accuracy, with higher likelihood of errors that can be detected or alerted to | • Ladouceur et al. ( | • Long-term effects of meditation on ERN and Pe have been tested by Teper and Inzlicht ( | • Accurately identifying errors (more negative ERN) without the upsurge in emotional response (no change or less positive Pe amplitude), might allow adolescents to learn from their mistakes without self-punishment. This mechanism could have links to reducing hypercritical self-judgment that can otherwise result in extreme risk-taking and self-harm (Klonsky, |
| Late positive potential (LPP) | A slow-building positive waveform, with a central/posterior distribution. Considered to be a neural marker of emotional arousal, reflecting preferential processing and encoding of motivationally relevant stimuli (Brown et al., | • Passive viewing or hearing of affective stimuli | • LPP response modulation does not reach adult levels until late adolescence (Zhang et al., | • Brown et al. ( | • Mindfulness training may impact on the strength of emotional responses, reflected in LPP amplitude reduction (possibly linked to less arousal and better emotion regulation), in the young adolescent population (Zhang et al., |
| Late positive complex (LPC) | Positive, broad-peaking waveform with a parietal distribution. It is associated with deep processing (Rellecke et al., | • Passive viewing or hearing affective stimuli | • Marks et al. ( | • Rellecke et al.’s ( | • Initial correlational studies measuring dispositional mindfulness, trait rumination and the LPC in adolescents could provide useful insights; increased rumination and decreased mindfulness should be linked to less positive LPC amplitudes. |