FRIDAY, 11 FEBRUARY 2011
Meditation has been used for thousands of years in religious rituals and as an aid to relaxation and thought. A new study, led by researchers at the Massachusetts General Hospital, suggests that the effects of meditation may go much further [1]. The density of participants’ grey matter, which contains the majority of a person’s neuronal cell bodies, was seen to increase with mindfulness meditation over the course of eight weeks.
Participants of the trial either took part in an eight week mindfulness-based meditation course, or were used as non-meditating controls. Significant differences were found in grey matter density after the trial in the meditating participants, with no change observed in the control group. Although encouraging for the scientific evaluation of meditation, this study used only a small sample size and a relatively short experimental duration. However, with more and more research on meditation, this looks to be a fruitful area for future neurological study.
Written by Philip Leibman