Meditation Gives the Brain a Charge. Marc Kaufman.
by Kaufman, Marc; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2006Article 13Health. Publisher: Spectator, 2005ISSN: 1522-323X;.Subject(s): Dalai Lama XIV | Meditation | Neurosciences | Prefrontal corte | Psychiatry -- ResearchDDC classification: 050 Summary: "Brain research is beginning to produce evidence for something Buddhist practitioners of meditation have maintained for centuries: mental discipline and meditative practice can change the workings of the brain and allow people to achieve different levels of awareness. Those transformed states have traditionally been understood in transcendent terms, as something outside the world of physical measurement. But in the past few years, researchers at the University of Wisconsin working with Tibetan monks have translated those mental experiences into the scientific language of high-frequency gamma waves and brain synchrony, or co-ordination." (SPECTATOR) This article explains how meditation can affect the physical activity of the brain.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 12 Adults Are Whooping, but Are Internists Listening?. | REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 12 Whooping Cough Shot Is Approved for Teens, Adults. | REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 13 Slow Down, Meditate. | REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 13 Meditation Gives the Brain a Charge. | REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 13 Finding Your Center: In Religion, Medicine and Psychology, .... | REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 14 Cuba: Health Without Wealth. | REF SIRS 2006 Health Article 14 Health Care? Ask Cuba. |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2006.
Originally Published: Meditation Gives the Brain a Charge, Jan. 14, 2005; pp. G.05.
"Brain research is beginning to produce evidence for something Buddhist practitioners of meditation have maintained for centuries: mental discipline and meditative practice can change the workings of the brain and allow people to achieve different levels of awareness. Those transformed states have traditionally been understood in transcendent terms, as something outside the world of physical measurement. But in the past few years, researchers at the University of Wisconsin working with Tibetan monks have translated those mental experiences into the scientific language of high-frequency gamma waves and brain synchrony, or co-ordination." (SPECTATOR) This article explains how meditation can affect the physical activity of the brain.
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