Schweitzer Yoav, Trautwein Fynn-Mathis, Dor-Ziderman Yair, Nave Ohad, David Jonathan, Fulder Stephen, Berkovich-Ohana Aviva
Edmond Safra Brain Research Center, Faculty of Education, University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel.
The Integrated Brain and Behavior Research Center (IBBRC), University of Haifa, Haifa 3498838, Israel.
Brain Sci. 2024 Nov 26;14(12):1181. doi: 10.3390/brainsci14121181.
In the last decade, empirical studies on the beneficial effects of meditation on prosocial capacities have accumulated, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Buddhist sources state that liberating oneself from a fixed view of the self by gaining access to its transitory and malleable nature leads to increased compassion and other prosocial traits. These, however, have not yet been empirically tested.
The current study aims at filling this gap by first examining whether 44 long term meditators differ from 53 controls in prosocial capacities on different levels of the socio-cognitive hierarchy, and second by examining whether these are associated with meditation-induced 'selfless' states, operationalized here as the sense of boundary (SB) flexibility. We capitalize on our previous work on the neurophenomenology of mindfulness-induced SB dissolution, which yielded a neural index of SB-flexibility, solely for the meditators, and examine its correlations with a battery of validated behavioral prosociality tasks.
Our findings reveal enhanced low-level prosocial processes in meditators, including enhanced emotion recognition and reduced outgroup bias. We show the stability of SB flexibility over a year, demonstrating consistent high beta deactivation. The neural index of SB flexibility negatively correlates with recognizing negative emotions, suggesting a link to reduced social threat perception.
These results connect the neural correlates of SB flexibility to prosociality, supported by stable high beta deactivations. We expect the results to raise awareness regarding the prosocial potential of flexing one's self-boundaries through meditation.
在过去十年中,关于冥想对亲社会能力有益影响的实证研究不断积累,但其潜在机制仍不明确。佛教典籍指出,通过认识到自我的短暂性和可塑性,从对自我的固定看法中解脱出来,会增强同情心和其他亲社会特质。然而,这些尚未经过实证检验。
本研究旨在填补这一空白,首先考察44名长期冥想者与53名对照组在社会认知层次不同水平上的亲社会能力是否存在差异,其次考察这些差异是否与冥想诱导的“无我”状态相关,在此将其操作化为边界感(SB)灵活性。我们利用之前关于正念诱导的SB消解的神经现象学研究成果,该研究仅为冥想者产生了SB灵活性的神经指标,并考察其与一系列经过验证的亲社会行为任务的相关性。
我们的研究结果显示,冥想者的低水平亲社会过程增强,包括情绪识别增强和群体外偏见减少。我们展示了SB灵活性在一年中的稳定性,表现出持续的高β波去激活。SB灵活性的神经指标与识别负面情绪呈负相关,表明与社会威胁感知降低有关。
这些结果将SB灵活性的神经关联与亲社会行为联系起来,稳定的高β波去激活为其提供了支持。我们预计这些结果将提高人们对通过冥想灵活调整自我边界的亲社会潜力的认识。