Sunday, April 24, 2011

How meditation might ward off the effects of ageing A study at a US Buddhist retreat suggests eastern relaxation techniques can protect our chromosome


How meditation might ward off the effects of ageing
A study at a US Buddhist retreat suggests eastern relaxation techniques can protect our chromosomes from degenerating
http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/apr/24/meditation-ageing-shamatha-project


How meditation might ward off the effects of ageing

A study at a US Buddhist retreat suggests eastern relaxation techniques can protect our chromosomes from degenerating

Interior of Great Stupa of Dharmakaya at Shambhala Mountain Center
The Shamatha project took place at Shambhala Mountain Centre in Colorado, USA. Photograph: Blaine Harrington III/Corbis

High in the mountains of northern Colorado, a 100-foot tall tower reaches up through the pinetops. Brightly coloured and strung with garlands, its ornate gold leaf glints in the sun. With a shape that symbolises a giant seated Buddha, this lofty stupa is intended to inspire those on the path to enlightenment.

Visitors here to the Shambhala Mountain Centre meditate in silence for up to 10 hours every day, emulating the lifestyle that monks have chosen for centuries in mountain refuges from India to Japan. But is it doing them any good? For two three-month retreats held in 2007, this haven for the eastern spiritual tradition opened its doors to western science. As attendees pondered the "four immeasurables" of love, compassion, joy and equanimity, a laboratory squeezed into the basement bristled with scientific equipment from brain and heart monitors to video cameras and centrifuges. The aim: to find out exactly what happens to people who meditate.

After several years of number-crunching, data from the so-called Shamatha project is finally starting to be published. So far the research has shown some not hugely surprising psychological and cognitive changes – improvements in perception and wellbeing, for example. But one result in particular has potentially stunning implications: that by protecting caps called telomeres on the ends of our chromosomes, meditation might help to delay the process of ageing.

It's the kind of claim more often associated with pseudoscience. Indeed, since researchers first started studying meditation, with its close links to religion and spirituality, they have had a tough time gaining scientific credibility. "A great danger in the field is that many researchers are also meditators, with a feeling about how powerful and useful these practices are," says Charles Raison, who studies mind-body interactions at Emory University in Atlanta. "There has been a tendency for people to be attempting to prove what they already know."

But a new generation of brain-imaging studies and robust clinical trials is helping to change that. Scientists from a range of fields are starting to compile evidence that rather than simply being a transient mental or spiritual experience, meditation may have long-term implications for physical health.

There are many kinds of meditation, including transcendental meditation, in which you focus on a repetitive mantra, and compassion meditation, which involves extending feelings of love and kindness to fellow living beings. One of the most studied practices is based on the Buddhist concept of mindfulness, or being aware of your own thoughts and surroundings. Buddhists believe it alleviates suffering by making you less caught up in everyday stresses – helping you to appreciate the present instead of continually worrying about the past or planning for the future.

"You pay attention to your own breath," explains Sara Lazar, a neuroscientist who studies the effects of meditation at Massachusetts general hospital in Boston. "If your mind wanders, you don't get discouraged, you notice the thought and think, 'OK'."

Small trials have suggested that such meditation creates more than spiritual calm. Reported physical effects include lowering blood pressure, helping psoriasis to heal, and boosting the immune response in vaccine recipients and cancer patients. In a pilot study in 2008, Willem Kuyken, head of the Mood Disorders Centre at Exeter University, showed that mindfulness meditation was more effective than drug treatment in preventing relapse in patients with recurrent depression. And in 2009, David Creswell of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh found that it slowed disease progression in patients with HIV.

Most of these trials have involved short courses of meditation aimed at treating specific conditions. The Shamatha project, by contrast, is an attempt to see what a longer, more intensive course of meditation might do for healthy people. The project was co-ordinated by neuroscientist Clifford Saron of the Centre for Mind and Brain at the University of California, Davis. His team advertised in Buddhist publications for people willing to spend three months in an intensive meditation retreat, and chose 60 participants. Half of them attended in the spring of 2007, while the other half acted as a control group before heading off for their own retreat in the autumn.

It sounds simple enough, but the project has taken eight years to organise and is likely to end up costing around $4m (partly funded by private organisations with an interest in meditation, including the Fetzer Institute and the Hershey Family Foundation). As well as shipping laptops all over the world to carry out cognitive tests on the volunteers before the study started, Saron's team built a hi-tech lab in a dorm room beneath the Shambhala centre's main hall, enabling them to subject participants and controls to tests at the beginning, middle and end of each retreat, and worked with "a village" of consulting scientists who each wanted to study different aspects of the meditators' performance. "It's a heroic effort," says neuroscientist Giuseppe Pagnoni, who studies meditation at the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia in Italy.

Many of the tests focused on changes in cognitive ability or regulation of emotions. Soft white caps trailing wires and electrodes measured the meditators' brain waves as they completed gruelling computerised tasks to test their powers of attention, and video recordings captured split-second changes in facial expressions as they watched images of suffering and war.

But psychologist Elissa Epel, from the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), wanted to know what the retreat was doing to the participants' chromosomes, in particular their telomeres. Telomeres play a key role in the ageing of cells, acting like a clock that limits their lifespan. Every time a cell divides, its telomeres get shorter, unless an enzyme called telomerase builds them back up. When telomeres get too short, a cell can no longer replicate, and ultimately dies.

It's not just an abstract concept. People with shorter telomeres are at greater risk of heart disease, diabetes, obesity, depression and degenerative diseases such as osteoarthritis and osteoporosis. And they die younger.

Epel has been collaborating with UCSF's Elizabeth Blackburn, who shared the 2009 Nobel physiology or medicine prize for her work on telomeres, to investigate whether telomeres are affected by psychological factors. They found that at the end of the retreat, meditators had significantly higher telomerase activity than the control group, suggesting that their telomeres were better protected. The researchers are cautious, but say that in theory this might slow or even reverse cellular ageing. "If the increase in telomerase is sustained long enough," says Epel, "it's logical to infer that this group would develop more stable and possibly longer telomeres over time."

Pagnoni has previously used brain imaging to show that meditation may protect against the cognitive decline that occurs as we age. But the Shamatha project is the first to suggest that meditation plays a role in cellular ageing. If that link is confirmed, he says, "that would be groundbreaking".

So how could focusing on your thoughts have such impressive physical effects? The assumption that meditation simply induces a state of relaxation is "dead wrong", says Raison. Brain-imaging studies suggest that it triggers active processes within the brain, and can cause physical changes to the structure of regions involved in learning, memory, emotion regulation and cognitive processing.

The question of how the immaterial mind affects the material body remains a thorny philosophical problem, but on a practical level, "our understanding of the brain-body dialogue has made jaw-dropping advances in the last decade or two," says Raison. One of the most dramatic links between the mind and health is the physiological pathways that have evolved to respond to stress, and these can explain much about how meditation works.

When the brain detects a threat in our environment, it sends signals to spur the body into action. One example is the "fight or flight" response of the nervous system. When you sense danger, your heart beats faster, you breathe more rapidly, and your pupils dilate. Digestion slows, and fat and glucose are released into the bloodstream to fuel your next move. Another stress response pathway triggers a branch of the immune system known as the inflammatory response.

These responses might help us to run from a mammoth or fight off infection, but they also damage body tissues. In the past, the trade-off for short bursts of stress would have been worthwhile. But in the modern world, these ancient pathways are continually triggered by long-term threats for which they aren't any use, such as debt, work pressures or low social status. "Psychological stress activates these pathways in exactly the same way that infection does," says Raison.

Such chronic stress has devastating effects, putting us at greater risk of a host of diseases including diabetes, cancer, heart disease, depression – and death. It also affects our telomeres. Epel, Blackburn and their colleagues found in 2004 that stressed mothers caring for a chronically ill child had shorter telomeres than mothers with healthy children. Their stress had accelerated the ageing process.

Meditation seems to be effective in changing the way that we respond to external events. After short courses of mindfulness meditation, people produce less of the stress hormone cortisol, and mount a smaller inflammatory response to stress. One study linked meditators' lower stress to changes in the amygdala – a brain area involved in fear and the response to threat.

Some researchers think this is the whole story, because the diseases countered most by meditation are those in which stress plays a major role. But Epel believes that meditation might also trigger "pathways of restoration and enhancement", perhaps boosting the parasympathetic nervous system, which works in opposition to the fight or flight response, or triggering the production of growth hormone.

In terms of the psychological mechanisms involved, Raison thinks that meditation allows people to experience the world as less threatening. "You reinterpret the world as less dangerous, so you don't get as much of a stress reaction," he says. Compassion meditation, for example, may help us to view the world in a more socially connected way. Mindfulness might help people to distance themselves from negative or stressful thoughts.

The Shamatha project used a mix of mindfulness and compassion meditation. The researchers concluded that the meditation affected telomerase by changing the participants' psychological state, which they assessed using questionnaires. Three factors in particular predicted higher telomerase activity at the end of the retreat: increased sense of control (over circumstances or daily life); increased sense of purpose in life; and lower neuroticism (being tense, moody and anxious). The more these improved, the greater the effect on the meditators' telomerase.

For those of us who don't have time for retreats, Epel suggests "mini-meditations" – focusing on breathing or being aware of our surroundings – at regular points throughout the day. And though meditation seems to be a particularly effective route to reducing stress and protecting telomeres, it's not the only one. "Lots of people have no interest in meditation, and that's fine," says Creswell. Exercise has been shown to buffer the effects of stress on telomeres, for example, while stress management programmes and writing emotional diaries can help to delay the progression of HIV.

Indeed, Clifford Saron argues that the psychological changes caused by the Shamatha retreat – increased sense of control and purpose in life – are more important than the meditation itself. Simply doing something we love, whether meditating or gardening, may protect us from stress and maybe even help us to live longer. "The news from this paper is the profound impact of having the opportunity to live your life in a way that you find meaningful."

For a scientific conclusion it sounds scarily spiritual. But researchers warn that in our modern, work-obsessed society we are increasingly living on autopilot, reacting blindly to tweets and emails instead of taking the time to think about what really matters. If we don't give our minds a break from that treadmill, the physical effects can be scarily real.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Buddhism and Neuroscience: Did Buddhism get the brain right?

Published on Psychology Today (http://www.psychologytoday.com)

By David Weisman, M.D.

BLOGS

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Rebirth: How does it work? A model based on the dependent origination

These are two videos illustrating the mechanisms of rebirth and dependent origination using the mind works model.



Video 1

The first video (above) shows the cognitive series.* When we die the five senses cease to exist. However the last contact made from one of the five sense just before death can generate three more thoughts shown as secondary, tertiary and quaternary cognitive series (please see the video 1 above).

In the background of ignorance (see video 2 below) one of these mental formations (thoughts) can then become the last thought (rebirth/generative kamma) that determines the future consciousness (rebirth consciousness). The consciousness in turn will determine the name-and-form of the future birth.

The name-and-form together with consciousness in the new embryo will form the six senses and with birth this will continue the cycle all over again (also see video 2 below) ending up with old age, sickness and death. The second video below shows the 12 step dependent origination as described in the suttas.




Video 2

Here are the 12 step dependent origination as described in a sutta.

1. From ignorance as a requisite condition come mental formations (fabrications).
2. From Mental formations (fabrications) as a requisite condition comes consciousness.
3. From consciousness as a requisite condition comes name-&-form.
4. From name-&-form as a requisite condition come the six sense media.
5. From the six sense media as a requisite condition comes contact.
6. From contact as a requisite condition comes feeling.
7. From feeling as a requisite condition comes craving.
8. From craving as a requisite condition comes clinging/sustenance.
9. From clinging/sustenance as a requisite condition comes becoming.
10. From becoming as a requisite condition comes birth.
11. From birth as a requisite condition,
12. Then aging & death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, distress, & despair come into play.

Such is the origination of this entire mass of stress & suffering.


* Cognitive series is explained in the post below:

Are we really "multi tasking"or is it just another sophisticated function of the mind?

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Are we really "multi tasking"or is it just another sophisticated function of the mind?




Have you ever wondered having driven the car somewhere, that you don't remember how you got there? While driving you may have listened to music and thought about work. You may have even been chatting on the cell phone. How can one person do all this and drive safely at the same time too? Some people call it ""multi tasking." Are we really multi tasking or is this just a sophisticated way of the function of the mind?

Let us explore this using the mind works model and try to elucidate a mechanism (see the video below)to see how this happens. We will take the eye as an example to keep this simple.




As we have discussed in previous posts when the eye meets an object eye conscious arises. With meeting of the three contact arises. However if we do not make eye consciousness we do not make eye contact. All three factors, the eye, the object and the eye consciousness have to be present to make eye contact.

When we make eye contact there is feeling, perception and mental formations that arises as a result (yellow arrows). The first mental formation (or thought) that arises is the primary cognition and is shown in purple arrows. This is the perception of the object. The thought* that arises as a result is fed back into the mind as a mental object. For example when driving it may be the thought that there is a car in front of you or change in the colour of the traffic light from green to red.

The primary cognition will immediately be followed by secondary cognition which is shown in yellow arrows. This will trigger the second thought.** This is a thought about the object. This is called the directed thought & evaluation. This could be a thought about the car that is stopped in front of you at the red traffic light.

This tertiary cognition that immediately follows the secondary cognition series is a result of an epiphenomenon of the primary cognitive series. Here the feeling about the object from the primary series will influence the perception of the object. This is shown in blue arrows. This thought*** therefore will have feelings about the object in addition to perception. In the driving example it could be an unpleasant feeling about the driver in the car in front, who stopped suddenly at the red light.

Next the quaternary series starts with the mind (green arrows) retrieving previous memory about the object triggered by the thoughts received by the mind. This will now give rise to a mind contact and trigger feeling, perception and mental formation. The resultant mental formation would give rise to another thought about the object. We now have perception, feeling and previous memory about the object. Therefore is a minimum of four cognitive series**** before one recognizes an object in full detail. Interestingly etymology of the word of recognition comes from re-cognizing. This series can follow the same sequence over and over again as long as we keep attention on that object. All thoughts that are generated may give rise to our speech and actions.

The above mechanism looks simple at a superficial level. In real life this is much more complex than this as all six senses bring in sensory information at different times. However it is important to note that only one sensory data of one of the six senses is processed at a given time through the cognitive series. The basic four step cognitive series explained above, taking the eye as an example will be exactly the same for other senses. However the mind is more complex as it receives copies of thoughts from all the other five senses.

So if we think about our six senses as "six channels" in a radio (see link to the previous post below) what we are really doing is like changing channels in a radio in a rapid fashion. These moments of cognition in a series happens at an extremely rapid speed. It has been estimated that there are approximately 8,125 moments in a second. This is a necessary function of the mind to gather information about the surrounding world. It is because of this rapid speed we are able to pick up easily from where we have left off in one channel. We then have a distorted view of a continuous process of events coming from multiple channels that are working at the same time. This we call "multi tasking."

Most of the times we use primary and secondary cognitive series when driving unless it is a complex task. That means we cognize and re-cognize (at least once) each and every event along the way. However we may not remember everything in detail as only the thoughts of primary and secondary cognitive series were used for this function. It is for more complex activities like calling somebody on the cell phone and thinking about the work while driving, we use multiple cognitive series beyond the minimum four cognitive series. In these activities we use multiple thought processes and therefore we remember better.

In mindfulness meditation with insight we train ourselves to be aware of all these channels (please read the post below). We can also examine them using our own mind as "the lab" how they really work. This mindfulness training will help us to be in the present moment with clear awareness. Mindful practice when applied correctly will help us not only to be skillful drivers but also to be skillful and efficient at home and work. We become very skillful in the activities we perform from our mind, body and speech. This will bring peace, contentment and happiness to to our lives.

Notes:

The three types of Sankharas

1. Bodily fabrications/mental formations(kaya sankhara)* The example given in sutta is in and out breathing. This is the thought when the mindfulness of breath is fully immersed in the body.

2. Verbal fabrications/mental formations (vachi sankhara).** This is vitakka-vicāra in Pali or translated to English as applied and sustained thought or directed thought & evaluation.

3. Mental fabrications/formations (citta sankhara).*** These are thoughts of perception and feeling.


The process of cognition**** (the cognitive series) is called citta-vƮthi in Pali


Also see the post: Mind is like a "working of a radio".

Monday, March 21, 2011

Mind is like a "working of a radio".


Mind is like a radio with six stations. It tunes into one station at a given time and that changes at a very rapid speed. The six receivers of the radio that receive the signals are like the six senses. The physical structure of the radio is like the brain. The radio signal that connects the receiver and generate the sound is like the consciousness.

In mindfulness meditation it is like tuning into one station at a time. For example, in breath meditation, we try to tune into the body and the sensation of breath. This connects mainly to the perception signal and that generates a thought about the breath (long or short). This is one of the circuits of breath meditation. If one tunes in well that person may be in a good state of concentration called "Samadhi". If one tunes out of it and tunes into the mind station fully (without having received any signals from the other five stations) this could be a like a higher state of mental absorption called "Jhana".

In insight meditation (Vipassana) one is fully aware that only one station works at a given time. Whatever the station one tunes in, the person sees the true nature of it (impermanence, suffering and non-self) and tunes out of it. Then the person awaits for the next signal to arise and fall away from the next station.

Unfortunately this is an old manual radio and therefore has no preset buttons like the modern ones. Therefore only way one can tune in and out is by practice and only by practice. There are no short cuts.

Saturday, November 20, 2010

The anatomy of a being...

Figure 1


Figure 2


Imagine there is a factory continuously working from the time it is built (Figure 1). There are the six cooperations within this factory. They are the main machinery responsible for the production of this factory. The the raw materials are supplied by out side. The power supply is generated within as the raw materials flow in toward the six cooperations. The is products from the previous factory stands as its main structure. This is also the base and function of six cooperations.

There these four products dependently arisen through a series of reactions. One of these products are responsible for making investments for a future new factory. There many by-products and they pollutes the factory and environment it resides. It looks like there is a CEO who is in total control of running the entire factory. However when you investigate closely the seat of the CEO is empty. One day the the entire factory is going to be closed together with the six cooperations. However the blue print for the information for a new factory will be transferred and a new factory that begins somewhere else. Then this process stars all over again.

In this simile:
1. The being is compared to a person.
2. Six cooperations are compared to the six senses.
3. The raw materials are compared to objects, sounds, smells, tastes, touch, and mental objects.
4. The power supply or the fuel is compared to craving.
5. The four main products are compared to the the four of the five aggregates, feelings, perceptions, mental formations and consciousness.
6. The main structure is compared to the form or the body (with its six senses) shown in Figure 2 but not in Figure 1.
7. The four products are compared to feelings, perceptions, mental formations and consciousness (Figure 1 and 2).
8. The products responsible for investment of a new company are compared to the volitions of the mental formations. This is the resultant kamma responsible for becoming of a new life (Figure 2).
9. The by-products are compared to multitude of emotional states, for example anger, envy and grief.
10. The apparent CEO is compared to the illusion called the "I" that feels that it is in control of this entire process.
11. Closing the factory is compared to death of the being.
12. The blue print for the information for the new factory is compared to the transfer of the rebirth consciousness (stream of consciousness) to a new life.
13. The beginning of a new factory is compared to rebirth.

If you follow the flow diagram in the mind works model you can see how this happens (Figure 2). Only the by-products are are not shown in Figure 2.

In this simile, if the being wants to bring this factory to halt it has to do one thing. It needs to cut off the power supply or the energy source. This is the ending of all craving. It sounds easy but in reality it is somewhat difficult but not impossible. To do this one has to first find the craving and where this it is generated. This is work of insight meditation or Vipassana. It is also important to find and remove misconception on this factory is based on. This is the ignorance of the being. It sees everything as permanent, satisfactory and self (see Figure 2).


Now we will examine a sutta fom the Buddha that talks about a being and see how craving works in relation to the five aggregates.
In this sutta Buddha describes the definition of a "being" ("Satta" in Pali)

He says "Any desire, passion, delight, or craving for:

1. Form(body)
2. Feeling
3. Perception
4. Fabrications (Mental formations)
5. Consciousness

"When one is caught up there, tied up there, one is said to be 'a being.'

These are the five aggregates we have discussed in other posts in detail. We are fettered to the five aggregated by craving. This gives us a false sense of illusion that there being or a person in control of this. This is called the Personality view or self Identity view (sakkaya-ditthi[sakkaaya-di.t.thi*]) is one of the main fetters that binds us to samsara.

The human being is nothing but a collection of five aggregates, a process of complex and rapidly changing (impermanent) psycho-physical organism(name-and-form), sustained by nutriments, driven by craving in the background of ignorance. However "it' perceives, feels, thinks and cognizes (working of the mind or name) that there is is a real person, permanent soul or a being in control of it. This is a false sense of being or an illusion. This is why "it" calls "itself" this is this is "mine", this is "me" and this is,"my-self". Everything around us driven around the the false sense of "I." However there no real "I" in it. Some may call this the Ego. This is the CEO of the simile about "the factory of being" above.

Buddha give a beautiful simile about how we should regard these five aggregates in this sutta.

"Just as when boys or girls are playing with little sand castles: as long as they are not free from passion, desire, love, thirst, fever, & craving for those little sand castles, that's how long they have fun with those sand castles, enjoy them, treasure them, feel possessive of them. But when they become free from passion, desire, love, thirst, fever, & craving for those little sand castles, then they smash them, scatter them, demolish them with their hands or feet and make them unfit for play.

"In the same way, ... you too should smash, scatter, & demolish the

1. Form(body)
2. Feeling
3. Perception
4. Fabrications (Mental formations)
5. Consciousness

... the ending of craving,... is Unbinding."

In this sutta the Buddha gives a very clear definition of Nirvana (Nibbana). He says the "ENDING OF CRAVING IS NIRVANA (UNBINDING)".

To read the full sutta follow the link below:

Self-identification view. The view that mistakenly identifies any of the khandha as "self"; the first of the ten fetters (samyojana). Abandonment of sakkaya-ditthi is one of the hallmarks of stream-entry (seesotapanna).