Abstract

The human brain has a remarkable capacity to store a lifetime of information through visual or auditory routes. It excels and exceeds any artificial memory system in mixing and integrating multiple pieces of information encoded. In this study, a group of verbal memory experts was evaluated by multiple structural brain analysis methods to record the changes in the brain structure. The participants were professional Hindu pandits (priests/scholars) trained in reciting Vedas and other forms of Hindu scriptures. These professional Vedic priests are experts in memorization and recitation of oral texts with precise diction. Vedas are a collection of hymns. It is estimated that there are more than 20,000 mantras and shlokas in the four Vedas. The analysis included the measurement of the grey and white matter density, gyrification, and cortical thickness in a group of Vedic pandits and comparing these measures with a matched control group. The results revealed an increased grey matter (GM) and white matter (WM) in the midbrain, pons, thalamus, parahippocampus, and orbitofrontal regions in pandits. The whole-brain corelation analysis using length of post-training teaching duration showed significant correlation with the left angular gyrus. We also found increased gyrification in the insula, supplementary motor area, medial frontal areas, and increased cortical thickness (CT) in the right temporal pole and caudate regions of the brain. These findings, collectively, provide unique information regarding the association between crucial memory regions in the brain and long-term practice of oral recitation of scriptures from memory with the proper diction that also involved controlled breathing.

Highlights

  • The human brain has a remarkable capacity to store a lifetime of information through visual or auditory routes

  • We analyzed the brain plasticity associated with long-term practicing extensive memorization and verbal recitation of Veda and Bachelor in education (Vedic) hymns, which is different from the skills mentioned above

  • To further delve into the brain plasticity induced by verbal memorization and recitation practice, we studied a group of Pandits (N = 25) and an age-matched control group

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Summary

Introduction

The human brain has a remarkable capacity to store a lifetime of information through visual or auditory routes. We found increased gyrification in the insula, supplementary motor area, medial frontal areas, and increased cortical thickness (CT) in the right temporal pole and caudate regions of the brain These findings, collectively, provide unique information regarding the association between crucial memory regions in the brain and long-term practice of oral recitation of scriptures from memory with the proper diction that involved controlled breathing. We analyzed the brain plasticity associated with long-term practicing extensive memorization and verbal recitation of Vedic hymns, which is different from the skills mentioned above. For this purpose, we recruited Sanskrit Pandits/priests trained in Vedic schools for long years in oral recitation and memorization of Vedic hymns and associated subsidiary texts. Damages within this region are associated with Korsakoff syndrome, a chronic memory ­disorder[27,28]

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