Image for Article: Study of Buddhist Monks Finds Meditation Alters Brain Activity

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Title
Article: Study of Buddhist Monks Finds Meditation Alters Brain Activity
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5 / 10
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A new international study challenges the common perception of meditation as a state of mental rest, finding it instead involves heightened cerebral activity and profoundly altered brain dynamics. Researchers used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to analyze the brain activity of Buddhist monks practicing two forms of meditation: Samatha (focused attention) and Vipassana (open monitoring).

The study found both meditation practices increase the complexity of brain signals compared to rest, indicating a dynamic state rich with information. However, they achieve this through different neural configurations, with Vipassana bringing the brain closer to an optimal balance between stability and flexibility, while Samatha produces a more focused and stable state.

The main topics covered are the study's findings on meditation's effect on brain activity, the comparison between Samatha and Vipassana techniques, and the concept of brain criticality as a state of optimal information processing.

Original URL
https://www.wired.com/story/study-of-buddhist-monks-finds-meditation-alters-brain-activity/
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Science Latest
Published Date
2026-02-11 22:35
Fetched Date
2026-03-04 14:35
Processed Date
2026-03-04 14:52
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