Abstract

Neurophenomenological studies seek to utilize first-person self-report to elucidate cognitive processes related to physiological data. Grounded theory offers an approach to the qualitative analysis of self-report, whereby theoretical constructs are derived from empirical data. Here we used grounded theory methodology (GTM) to assess how the first-person experience of meditation relates to neural activity in a core region of the default mode network—the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC). We analyzed first-person data consisting of meditators' accounts of their subjective experience during runs of a real time fMRI neurofeedback study of meditation, and third-person data consisting of corresponding feedback graphs of PCC activity during the same runs. We found that for meditators, the subjective experiences of “undistracted awareness” such as “concentration” and “observing sensory experience,” and “effortless doing” such as “observing sensory experience,” “not efforting,” and “contentment,” correspond with PCC deactivation. Further, the subjective experiences of “distracted awareness” such as “distraction” and “interpreting,” and “controlling” such as “efforting” and “discontentment,” correspond with PCC activation. Moreover, we derived several novel hypotheses about how specific qualities of cognitive processes during meditation relate to PCC activity, such as the difference between meditation and “trying to meditate.” These findings offer novel insights into the relationship between meditation and mind wandering or self-related thinking and neural activity in the default mode network, driven by first-person reports.

Highlights

  • First-person subjective experience is critical for furthering our understanding of cognitive processes

  • We determined principal constructs for the phenomena of subjective experience that corresponded with posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) deactivation (Figure 2) or PCC activation (Figure 3)

  • These findings are consistent with prior work indicating that the PCC is activated during mind wandering (Mason et al, 2007) and self-referential processing (WhitfieldGabrieli et al, 2011) such as past and future thinking (Andrews-Hanna et al, 2010), and deactivated during three meditation practices in expert compared to novice meditators (Brewer et al, 2011; Pagnoni, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

First-person subjective experience is critical for furthering our understanding of cognitive processes. Adept meditators reported a significant correspondence between their moment-to-moment experience of meditation and real time neurofeedback from the posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), a brain region previously found to be activated during self-related thinking (Buckner et al, 2008) and deactivated during meditation (Brewer et al, 2011). They were able to use what they had learned about the subjective qualities of meditation that related to feedback in order to volitionally deactivate the PCC. Because the PCC has been associated with numerous cognitive states (Andrews-Hanna et al, 2010) the specific aspects of subjective experience that relate to PCC activity are yet unknown

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