학술논문

Reconfiguration of Electroencephalography Microstate Networks after Breath-Focused, Digital Meditation Training
Document Type
article
Source
Brain Connectivity. 11(2)
Subject
Behavioral and Social Science
Complementary and Integrative Health
Clinical Research
Neurosciences
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Good Health and Well Being
Brain
Brain Mapping
Electroencephalography
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Meditation
Rest
Young Adult
attention
bodily self-consciousness
EEG microstates
EEG source localization
meditation training
Language
Abstract
Sustained attention and working memory were improved in young adults after they engaged in a recently developed, closed-loop, digital meditation practice. Whether this type of meditation also has a sustained effect on dominant resting-state networks is currently unknown. In this study, we examined the resting brain states before and after a period of breath-focused, digital meditation training versus placebo using an electroencephalography (EEG) microstate approach. We found topographical changes in postmeditation rest, compared with baseline rest, selectively for participants who were actively involved in the meditation training and not in participants who engaged with an active, expectancy-match, placebo control paradigm. Our results suggest a reorganization of brain network connectivity after 6 weeks of intensive meditation training in brain areas, mainly including the right insula, the superior temporal gyrus, the superior parietal lobule, and the superior frontal gyrus bilaterally. These findings provide an opening for the development of a novel noninvasive treatment of neuropathological states by low-cost, breath-focused, digital meditation practice, which can be monitored by the EEG microstate approach.