Meditative absorption shifts brain dynamics toward criticality
Jonas Mago, Joshua Brahinsky, Mark Miller, Charlotte Maschke, Heleen A. Slagter, Shaila Catherine, Ruben E. Laukkonen, B. Rael Cahn, Matthew D. Sacchet, Wangmo Dixey, Richard Dixey, Soham Rej, Michael Lifshitz

TL;DR
This study investigates how meditative absorption, specifically jhana states, influences brain dynamics, revealing a shift toward criticality characterized by increased neural diversity, reduced chaoticity, and enhanced sensory deviance detection, indicating a near-critical neural regime.
Contribution
It demonstrates that meditative absorption can modulate brain dynamics toward criticality, providing neurophysiological markers for altered states of consciousness during meditation.
Findings
Jhana states show higher neural signal diversity and reduced chaoticity.
Enhanced mismatch negativity amplitude during jhana indicates increased deviance detection.
Spectral analysis reveals a flatter aperiodic component and reorganized temporal correlations.
Abstract
Criticality describes a regime between order and chaos that supports flexible yet stable information processing. Here we examine whether neural dynamics can be volitionally shifted toward criticality through the self-regulation of attention. We examined ten experienced practitioners of meditation during a 10-day retreat, comparing refined states of meditative absorption, called the jhanas, to regular mindfulness of breathing. We collected electroencephalography (EEG) and physiological data during these practices and quantified the signal's dynamical properties using Lempel-Ziv complexity, signal entropy, chaoticity and long-range temporal correlations. In addition, we estimated perturbational sensitivity using a global auditory oddball mismatch negativity (MMN) during meditation. Relative to mindfulness, jhana was associated with pronounced self-reported sensory fading, slower…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMindfulness and Compassion Interventions · Neuroscience and Music Perception · Mind wandering and attention
