TUESDAY, Aug. 17 (HealthDay News) -- Positive brain changes take
hold after just 11 hours of practicing a form of meditation, the
results of a new study suggest.
The study included 45 University of Oregon students who were
randomly selected to be in either a study group that did
integrative body-mind training (IBMT) or a control group that did
relaxation training. IBMT was adapted from traditional Chinese
medicine in the 1990s.
A comparison of scans taken of the students' brains before and
after the training showed that those in the IBMT group had
increased brain connectivity. The changes were strongest in
connections involving the anterior cingulate, an area that plays a
role in the regulation of emotions and behavior, Yi-Yuan Tang of
Dalian University of Technology in China, University of Oregon
psychologist Michael I. Posner, and colleagues found.
The boost in brain connectivity began after six hours of IBMT
and became more apparent after 11 hours of practice, according to
the report published in the Aug. 16-21 online edition of the
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The meditation-induced changes may be due to a reorganization of
white-matter tracts or due to an increase of myelin that surrounds
the brain connections, the study authors suggested.
"The importance of our finding relates to the ability to make structural changes in a brain network related to self-regulation. The pathway that has the largest change due to IBMT is one that previously was shown to relate to individual differences in the person's ability to regulate conflict," Posner said in a university news release.
More information
The U.S. National Center for Complementary and Alternative
Medicine has more about
meditation.