Influence of long-term Sahaja Yoga meditation practice on emotional processing in the brain: An ERP study

•ERPs were obtained in meditators and controls during affective picture viewing.•Mid-latency ERP positivity for positive and negative stimuli was attenuated in meditators.•Long-term meditation practice influences processes of the fast automatic salience detection.•Attentional top-down control is mor...

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Published inNeuroscience Vol. 281; pp. 195 - 201
Main Authors Reva, N.V., Pavlov, S.V., Loktev, K.V., Korenyok, V.V., Aftanas, L.I.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Ltd 05.12.2014
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ISSN0306-4522
1873-7544
1873-7544
DOI10.1016/j.neuroscience.2014.09.053

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Summary:•ERPs were obtained in meditators and controls during affective picture viewing.•Mid-latency ERP positivity for positive and negative stimuli was attenuated in meditators.•Long-term meditation practice influences processes of the fast automatic salience detection.•Attentional top-down control is more effective in meditators. Despite growing interest in meditation as a tool for alternative therapy of stress-related and psychosomatic diseases, brain mechanisms of beneficial influences of meditation practice on health and quality of life are still unclear. We propose that the key point is a persistent change in emotional functioning, specifically the modulation of the early appraisal of motivational significance of events. The main aim was to study the effects of long-term meditation practice on event-related brain potentials (ERPs) during affective picture viewing. ERPs were recorded in 20 long-term Sahaja Yoga meditators and 20 control subjects without prior experience in meditation. The meditators’ mid-latency (140–400ms) ERPs were attenuated for both positive and negative pictures (i.e. there were no arousal-related increases in ERP positivity) and this effect was more prominent over the right hemisphere. However, we found no differences in the long latency (400–800ms) responses to emotional images, associated with meditation practice. In addition we found stronger ERP negativity in the time window 200–300ms for meditators compared to the controls, regardless of picture valence. We assume that long-term meditation practice enhances frontal top-down control over fast automatic salience detection, based on amygdala functions.
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ISSN:0306-4522
1873-7544
1873-7544
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroscience.2014.09.053