The science behind meditation and brain health
The science behind meditation and brain health
Mamta
kotali (Mentee)
Med
FY year 2025-26
Dr
Pratima Mishra ( Mentor)
Associate
Professor
H.
G. M. Azam college of education
Dr
PS Inamdar University, Pune, Maharashtra.
Meditation enhances brain health by leveraging neuroplasticity to physically restructure the brain, increasing grey matter in areas involved in memory and focus (hippocampus/prefrontal cortex) while shrinking the amygdala, thereby reducing stress, anxiety, and emotional reactivity.
Regular practice
improves emotional regulation, boosts cognitive function, and strengthens
functional connectivity between brain regions, leading to better focus and
reduced cognitive decline.
Meditation improves
brain health by inducing neuroplasticity, which strengthens brain regions involved in focus, memory, and emotional regulation while reducing amygdala
reactivity. Regular practice increases cortical thickness and grey matter,
reduces stress-related neurotransmitters, and improves cognitive function, with
measurable benefits often appearing within 6-8 weeks.
Structural and Functional Brain Changes
·
Neuroplasticity: Meditation strengthens neural connections, increasing grey matter density in the hippocampus (memory) and frontal regions (executive
function).
·
Reduced Amygdala
Activity: Studies using
fMRI show that meditation decreases the reactivity of the amygdala, the brain's
"fight-or-flight" centre, leading to improved stress resilience and
emotional regulation.
·
Cortical Thickness: Long-term practitioners exhibit increased cortical
thickness in the prefrontal cortex and anterior insula, areas involved in
attention and awareness.
·
Default Mode Network
(DMN): Meditation helps
quiet the DMN, the part of the brain associated with mind-wandering and
self-referential thoughts ("monkey mind").
Neuroplasticity: Meditation strengthens neural
connections, increasing grey matter density in the hippocampus (memory) and
frontal regions (executive function).
Reduced Amygdala Activity: Studies using fMRI show
that meditation decreases the reactivity of the amygdala, the brain’s
“fight-or-flight” centre, leading to improved stress resilience and emotional
regulation.
Cortical Thickness: Long-term practitioners exhibit
increased cortical thickness in the prefrontal cortex and anterior insula,
areas involved in attention and awareness.
Default Mode Network (DMN): Meditation helps quiet the DMN, the part of the brain associated with mind-wandering and self-referential thoughts.
Benefits to Mental Health
Stress
Reduction: By calming the sympathetic nervous system, meditation reduces
cortisol and improves heart rate variability.
Improved Emotional Regulation: It helps individuals
respond rather than react to stressful situations.
Cognitive Enhancements: Studies suggest improved
attention, focus, and memory as a result of a thickened prefrontal cortex and
improved connectivity.
Prefrontal Cortex: Thickens to enhance decision-making
and cognitive control.
Amygdala: Shrinks, lowering anxiety and emotional
reactivity.
Hippocampus: Increases gray matter, improving memory
and learning.
What Happens When You
Meditate?
The benefits of meditation have long
been touted: relief from stress and anxiety, and an increased ability to
focus. Stanford looks at
how meditation prompts our body and brain to make these adjustments.
What
happens in the brain?
“Meditation is an intentional practice to
cultivate awareness using concentration,” says Angela Lumba-Brown, a clinical
associate professor of emergency medicine and co-director of the Stanford Brain
Performance Center. That concentration can affect neurotransmitters in our
brains. Each of our billions of neurons can send 5 to 50 neurochemical signals
per second, she says, allowing our brains to rapidly communicate with our body.
Levels of dopamine (the neurotransmitter of pleasure), serotonin (the neurotransmitter
of happiness), and GABA (the neurotransmitter of calmness) all rise in response
to meditation. And in people who practice on a daily basis, they send signals
more routinely. But it’s not one big, er, brain dump. “It’s more that there are
overall changes in these combinations of neurotransmitters that reflect a more
positive, relaxed, and even contented direction,” Lumba-Brown says.
Meditation can also alter electrical
impulses, or brain waves. Faster brain waves are linked to high-energy
intensity, stress, and hypervigilance, Lumba-Brown says. Meditation can prompt
the brain to shift from those high-alert waves to the slower, more relaxed
waves that are linked to states of calm, deep focus, and sleep.
Conclusion
Meditation is a
mentally challenging exercise. Self-efficacy—the belief in your ability to act
in ways that lead to reaching goals—can go a long way toward helping you
overcome the potential discomfort of sitting alone with your own thoughts. “If
you see meditation as a skill you can tangibly improve at, that’s going to help
you,” Dixon says. “You will get better at it.”
If you see meditation as a skill you can tangibly improve at, that’s going to help you.
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ReplyDeleteMeditation improves brain health , truly said
ReplyDeleteThis blog highlights the importance of balance between mind and body.
ReplyDeleteThis article beautifully captures the silent conversation between meditation and the mind. Like gentle waves reshaping the shore, meditation slowly transforms the brain—bringing calm where there was chaos, and clarity where there was confusion. Science now reveals what ancient wisdom always knew: that stillness is not emptiness, but a powerful space where the mind heals, grows, and awakens.
ReplyDeleteIn the quiet rhythm of breath, the brain learns to soften its fears, strengthen its focus, and rediscover balance. Each moment of mindfulness feels like a brushstroke painting peace across the canvas of our thoughts.
A truly enlightening exploration of how meditation nurtures both the mind and the soul!
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