| Literature DB >> 27032724 |
Kieran C R Fox1, Matthew L Dixon2, Savannah Nijeboer2, Manesh Girn2, James L Floman3, Michael Lifshitz4, Melissa Ellamil5, Peter Sedlmeier6, Kalina Christoff7.
Abstract
Meditation is a family of mental practices that encompasses a wide array of techniques employing distinctive mental strategies. We systematically reviewed 78 functional neuroimaging (fMRI and PET) studies of meditation, and used activation likelihood estimation to meta-analyze 257 peak foci from 31 experiments involving 527 participants. We found reliably dissociable patterns of brain activation and deactivation for four common styles of meditation (focused attention, mantra recitation, open monitoring, and compassion/loving-kindness), and suggestive differences for three others (visualization, sense-withdrawal, and non-dual awareness practices). Overall, dissociable activation patterns are congruent with the psychological and behavioral aims of each practice. Some brain areas are recruited consistently across multiple techniques-including insula, pre/supplementary motor cortices, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, and frontopolar cortex-but convergence is the exception rather than the rule. A preliminary effect-size meta-analysis found medium effects for both activations (d=0.59) and deactivations (d=-0.74), suggesting potential practical significance. Our meta-analysis supports the neurophysiological dissociability of meditation practices, but also raises many methodological concerns and suggests avenues for future research.Entities:
Keywords: Activation likelihood estimation; Focused attention; Functional magnetic resonance imaging; Meditation; Meta-analysis; Open monitoring
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27032724 DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.03.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurosci Biobehav Rev ISSN: 0149-7634 Impact factor: 8.989