Psycho physiological Effects of two Meditative States Described in yoga Texts.
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2013-01-17
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Abstract
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND
In ancient yoga texts, there are two meditative states described. One is dhäraëä, which
requires focusing, the second is dhyäna, during which there is no focusing, but an
expansive mental state is reached. The earlier study on changes in brainstem auditory
evoked potentials following four mental states described in yoga texts viz., caïcalatä
(random thinking), ekägratä (focusing without meditation), dhäraëä (focused
meditation) and dhyäna (meditative defocussing or effortless meditation) showed
significant increase in wave V peak latency during caïcalatä, ekägratä and dhäraëä
but not in dhyäna (Kumar et al., 2010). The results suggest that dhyäna practice alone
does not delay auditory information transmission at the brainstem level, whereas
caïcalatä, ekägratä and dhäraëä showed delay in auditory information processing at
the inferior collicular level since the wave V corresponds to that level. Another study
assessed the performance in a cancellation task at the beginning and end of the four
types of session viz., caïcalatä, ekägratä, dhäraëä, and dhyäna (Kumar & Telles,
2009). The performance in cancellation task improved significantly after dhäraëä and
was worse after caïcalatä, suggesting better attention after dhäraëä. The changes in
mid-latency auditory evoked potentials during these four mental states have not been
studied.
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Keywords
Meditative states, yoga texts