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Psychophysiological correlates of meditation

Psychophysiological correlates of meditation
Archives of General Psychiatry
Format: Journal Article
Publication Date: 1975-10
Publisher: American Medical Association
Place of Publication: Chicago, Ill.
Pages: 1326-1333
Sources ID: 126492
Visibility: Public (group default)
Abstract: (Show)

The scientific research that has investigated the physiological changes associated with meditation as it is practiced by adherents of Indian Yoga, Transcendental Meditation, and Zen has not yielded a thoroughly consistent, easily replicable pattern of responses. The majority of studies show meditation to be a wakeful state accompanied by a lowering of cortical and autonomic arousal. The investigations of Zen and Transcendental Meditation have thus far produced the most consistent findings. Additional research into the mechanisms underlying the phenomena of meditation will require a shifting from old to new methodological perspectives that allow for adequate experimental control and the testing of theoretically relevant hypotheses.

Subjects: 
Zen Meditation/Zazen
Zen/Ch’an Buddhism
Clinical Studies on Meditation