Meditation & the brain - podcast episode cover

Meditation & the brain

Jan 26, 202339 minEp. 61
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Episode description

An online transcript is available ��

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There's growing evidence that the routine practice of meditation improves quality of life (including relief from anxiety, increased focus, and the mitigation of negative emotions) and that these benefits can be seen after as few as five sessions of meditation. But we didn't really need scientific journals to tell us that: Practitioners of mindfulness meditation have been enjoying the benefits of this natural brain hack for millennia. ��

On today's program, host Se��n Collins talks with a pioneering neuroscience researcher who describes what goes on in the brains of people who meditate, with a hospice doctor who trains his colleagues in techniques of meditation to help them deal with the stresses of their work, and with the founder of a program in Southern California that teaches at-risk youth to meditate as part of a program in effective social and emotional learning.

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Michael Posner, Ph.D., M.S.

Professor Emeritus

Department of Psychology

University of Oregon

Eugene, Ore.

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Glen Komatsu, M.D.

Chief Medical Officer

Providence Hospice, Los Angeles County

Torrance, Calif.

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Patricia Jones

Founder

P.S. I Love You Foundation

Redondo Beach, Calif.

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Se��n refers to the Balance app ��� a personalized meditation coaching tool which is available for both the Apple and Android platforms.

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MORE INFORMATION

Short-term meditation training improves attention and self-regulation (Tang, Posner, et al., 2007)

Short-term meditation induces white matter changes in the anterior cingulate (Tang, Posner, et al., 2010)

Mechanisms of white matter change induced by meditation training (Posner, Tang, & Lynch, 2014)

Circuitry of self-control and its role in reducing addiction (Tang, Posner, et al., 2015)

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction vs Escitalopram for the Treatment of Adults With Anxiety Disorders (Hoge, et al. 2023)

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