Chowdhury Avijit, Bianciardi Marta, Chapdelaine Eric, Riaz Omar S, Timmermann Christopher, van Lutterveld Remko, Sparby Terje, Sacchet Matthew D
Meditation Research Program, Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Depression and Anxiety Centre for Discovery and Treatment, Icahn School of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, NY, USA.
Brainstem Imaging Lab, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Neuroimage. 2025 Jan;305:120973. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2024.120973. Epub 2024 Dec 14.
Using a combination of fMRI, EEG, and phenomenology ratings, we examined the neurophenomenology of advanced concentrative absorption meditation, namely jhanas (ACAM-J), in a practitioner with over 23,000 h of meditation practice. Our study shows that ACAM-J states induce reliable changes in conscious experience and that these experiences are related to neural activity. Using resting-state fMRI functional connectivity, we found that ACAM-J is associated with decreased within-network modularity, increased global functional connectivity (GFC), and desegregation of the default mode and visual networks. Compared to control tasks, the ACAM-J were also related to widespread decreases in broadband EEG oscillatory power and increases in Lempel-Ziv complexity (LZ, a measure of brain entropy). Some fMRI findings varied by the control task used, while EEG results remained consistent, emphasizing both shared and unique neural features of ACAM-J. These differences in fMRI and EEG-measured neurophysiological properties correlated with specific changes in phenomenology - and especially with ACAM-J-induced states of bliss - enriching our understanding of these advanced meditative states. Our results show that advanced meditation practices markedly dysregulate high-level brain systems via practices of enhanced attention to sensations, corroborating recent neurocognitive theories of meditation as the deconstruction of the brain's cortical hierarchy. Overall, our results suggest that ACAM-J is associated with the modulation of large-scale brain networks in both fMRI and EEG, with potential implications for understanding the mechanisms of deep concentration practices and their effects on subjective experience.
我们结合功能磁共振成像(fMRI)、脑电图(EEG)和现象学评分,对一位有超过23000小时冥想练习经验的修行者进行了高级专注吸收冥想(即禅那,ACAM-J)的神经现象学研究。我们的研究表明,ACAM-J状态会引起意识体验的可靠变化,且这些体验与神经活动相关。通过静息态fMRI功能连接性研究,我们发现ACAM-J与网络内模块化程度降低、全局功能连接性(GFC)增加以及默认模式网络和视觉网络的解整合有关。与对照任务相比,ACAM-J还与宽带EEG振荡功率的广泛降低以及莱姆尔-齐夫复杂度(LZ,一种脑熵测量指标)的增加有关。一些fMRI结果因所使用的对照任务而异,而EEG结果保持一致,这凸显了ACAM-J在神经特征上的共性与独特性。fMRI和EEG测量的这些神经生理特性差异与现象学的特定变化相关——尤其是与ACAM-J诱发的极乐状态相关——丰富了我们对这些高级冥想状态的理解。我们的结果表明,高级冥想练习通过增强对感觉的注意力的练习显著地失调高级脑系统,证实了最近将冥想视为大脑皮层层次解构的神经认知理论。总体而言,我们的结果表明,ACAM-J在fMRI和EEG中均与大规模脑网络的调制有关,这对于理解深度专注练习的机制及其对主观体验的影响具有潜在意义。