Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
937902 Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 2014 26 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Many studies have examined ‘morphometric’ neuroimaging of meditation practitioners.•We conduct a meta-analysis of these gray and white matter differences in meditators.•We find consistent differences in prefrontal cortex and body awareness regions.•Global mean effect size is ‘moderate’ (Cohen's d = 0.46; r = .19).•Results suggest consistent and medium-sized brain structure differences.

Numerous studies have begun to address how the brain's gray and white matter may be shaped by meditation. This research is yet to be integrated, however, and two fundamental questions remain: Is meditation associated with altered brain structure? If so, what is the magnitude of these differences? To address these questions, we reviewed and meta-analyzed 123 brain morphology differences from 21 neuroimaging studies examining ∼300 meditation practitioners. Anatomical likelihood estimation (ALE) meta-analysis found eight brain regions consistently altered in meditators, including areas key to meta-awareness (frontopolar cortex/BA 10), exteroceptive and interoceptive body awareness (sensory cortices and insula), memory consolidation and reconsolidation (hippocampus), self and emotion regulation (anterior and mid cingulate; orbitofrontal cortex), and intra- and interhemispheric communication (superior longitudinal fasciculus; corpus callosum). Effect size meta-analysis (calculating 132 effect sizes from 16 studies) suggests a global ‘medium’ effect size (Cohen's d¯=0.46; r¯=.19). Publication bias and methodological limitations are strong concerns, however. Further research using rigorous methods is required to definitively link meditation practice to altered brain morphology.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Behavioral Neuroscience
Authors
, , , , , , , ,