Abstract

Meditation is a consciousness state associated with specific physiological and neural correlates. Numerous investigations of these correlates reported controversial results which prevented a consistent depiction of the underlying neurophysiological processes. Here we investigated the dynamics of multiple neurophysiological indicators during a staged meditation session. We measured the physiological changes at rest and during the guided Taoist meditation in experienced meditators and naive subjects. We recorded EEG, respiration, galvanic skin response, and photoplethysmography. All subjects followed the same instructions split into 16 stages. In the experienced meditators group we identified two subgroups with different physiological markers dynamics. One subgroup showed several signs of general relaxation evident from the changes in heart rate variability, respiratory rate, and EEG rhythmic activity. The other subgroup exhibited mind concentration patterns primarily noticeable in the EEG recordings while no autonomic responses occurred. The duration and type of previous meditation experience or any baseline indicators we measured did not explain the segregation of the meditators into these two groups. These results suggest that two distinct meditation strategies could be used by experienced meditators, which partly explains the inconsistent results reported in the earlier studies evaluating meditation effects. Our findings are also relevant to the development of the high-end biofeedback systems.

Highlights

  • Meditation is an ancient tradition that dates back thousands of years

  • We found that the experienced meditators and the novices differed significantly in terms of changes of the most heart rate variability (HRV) derived indices, respiration rate, and respiration amplitude (S3 Table)

  • We found that the meditation effect on the heart rate variability (HRV) indices differed between the experienced and novice subjects

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Summary

Introduction

Meditation is an ancient tradition that dates back thousands of years. It can be described as a complex process aimed at self-regulating the body and mind [1]. The popularity of meditation in the Western world has risen significantly over the past decades [2]. This can be explained not just by fashion and by a growing body of evidence on the meditation benefits.

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