Abstract
Despite over 50 years of research into the states of consciousness induced by various meditation
practices, no clear neurophysiological signatures of these states have
been found. Much of this failure can be attributed to the narrow range
of variables examined in most meditation studies, with the focus
being restricted to a search for correlations between neurophysiological
measures and particular practices, without documenting the content and
context of these practices. We contend that more meaningful results can
be obtained by expanding the methodological paradigm to include multiple
domains including: the cultural setting ("the place"), the life
situation of the meditator ("the person"), details of the particular meditation
practice ('the practice'), and the state of consciousness of the
meditator ("the phenomenology"). Inclusion of variables from all these
domains will improve the ability to predict the psychophysiological
variables ("the psychophysiology") associated with specific meditation states and thus explore the mysteries of human consciousness.
KEYWORDS:
consciousness; meditation; meditation states; methodology; subjective measures- PMID:
- 25071607
- [PubMed]
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