Department of Integrative Neurophysiology, Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research (CNCR), Amsterdam Neuroscience, VU Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1081 HV, Netherlands.
Bender Institute of Neuroimaging (BION), Justus Liebig University Giessen, Giessen, 35394, Germany.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2018 Apr;39(4):1825-1838. doi: 10.1002/hbm.23971. Epub 2018 Jan 13.
Our focus of attention naturally fluctuates between different sources of information even when we desire to focus on a single object. Focused attention (FA) meditation is associated with greater control over this process, yet the neuronal mechanisms underlying this ability are not entirely understood. Here, we hypothesize that the capacity of attention to transiently focus and swiftly change relates to the critical dynamics emerging when neuronal systems balance at a point of instability between order and disorder. In FA meditation, however, the ability to stay focused is trained, which may be associated with a more homogeneous brain state. To test this hypothesis, we applied analytical tools from criticality theory to EEG in meditation practitioners and meditation-naïve participants from two independent labs. We show that in practitioners-but not in controls-FA meditation strongly suppressed long-range temporal correlations (LRTC) of neuronal oscillations relative to eyes-closed rest with remarkable consistency across frequency bands and scalp locations. The ability to reduce LRTC during meditation increased after one year of additional training and was associated with the subjective experience of fully engaging one's attentional resources, also known as absorption. Sustained practice also affected normal waking brain dynamics as reflected in increased LRTC during an eyes-closed rest state, indicating that brain dynamics are altered beyond the meditative state. Taken together, our findings suggest that the framework of critical brain dynamics is promising for understanding neuronal mechanisms of meditative states and, specifically, we have identified a clear electrophysiological correlate of the FA meditation state.
我们的注意力自然会在不同的信息源之间波动,即使我们希望专注于一个单一的对象。专注注意力(FA)冥想与对这个过程的更大控制能力相关联,但支持这种能力的神经元机制尚未完全理解。在这里,我们假设注意力暂时集中和快速变化的能力与神经元系统在有序和无序之间的不稳定点上平衡时出现的关键动力学有关。然而,在 FA 冥想中,专注的能力是经过训练的,这可能与更均匀的大脑状态有关。为了检验这一假设,我们在来自两个独立实验室的冥想者和冥想新手参与者的 EEG 中应用了来自临界理论的分析工具。我们表明,在冥想者中——而不是在对照组中——FA 冥想相对于闭眼休息时强烈抑制了神经元振荡的长程时间相关性(LRTC),在不同的频段和头皮位置上具有显著的一致性。在冥想中减少 LRTC 的能力在额外一年的训练后增加,并与充分利用注意力资源的主观体验相关联,也称为吸收。持续的练习还影响了正常的清醒大脑动力学,表现在闭眼休息状态下 LRTC 的增加,这表明大脑动力学在冥想状态之外发生了改变。总的来说,我们的发现表明,临界大脑动力学的框架有望理解冥想状态的神经元机制,并且我们已经确定了 FA 冥想状态的明确电生理相关性。