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Buddhists
Really Are Happier
Scientists say they have evidence to show
that Buddhists really are happier and calmer than other people. Tests
carried out in the United States reveal that areas of their brain associated
with good mood and positive feelings are more active. The findings come
as another study suggests that Buddhist meditation can help to calm people.
Researchers at University of California San Francisco Medical Center have
found the practice can tame the amygdala, an area of the brain which is
the hub of fear memory. " There is something about conscientious
Buddhist practice that results in the kind of happiness we all seek "
Paul Ekman, University of California San Francisco Medical Centre They
found that experienced Buddhists, who meditate regularly, were less likely
to be shocked, flustered, surprised or as angry compared to other people.
Paul Ekman, who carried out the study, said: "The most reasonable
hypothesis is that there is something about conscientious Buddhist practice
that results in the kind of happiness we all seek." Brain activity
In a separate study, scientists at the University of Wisconsin at Madison
used new scanning techniques to examine brain activity in a group of Buddhists.
Their tests revealed activity in the left prefrontal lobes of experienced
Buddhist practitioners. This area is linked to positive emotions, self-control
and temperament. Their tests showed this area of the Buddhists' brains
are constantly lit up and not just when they are meditating. This, the
scientists said, suggests they are more likely to experience positive
emotions and be in good mood. "We can now hypothesise with some confidence
that those apparently happy, calm Buddhist souls one regularly comes across
in places such as Dharamsala, India, really are happy," said Professor
Owen Flanagan, of Duke University in North Carolina. Dharamsala is the
home base of exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama. The studies are published
in New Scientist magazine.
Is
Buddhism Good for Your Health?
By STEPHEN S. HALL
New York Times
September 14, 2003
In the spring of 1992, out of the blue, the fax machine in Richard Davidson's
office at the department of psychology at the University of Wisconsin
at Madison spit out a letter from Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama.
Davidson, a Harvard-trained neuroscientist, was making a name for himself
studying the nature of positive emotion, and word of his accomplishments
had made it to northern India. The exiled spiritual leader of Tibetan
Buddhists was writing to offer the minds of his monks in particular,
their meditative prowess for scientific research.
Most self-respecting American neuroscientists would shrink from, if not
flee, an invitation to study Buddhist meditation, viewing the topic as
impossibly fuzzy and, as Davidson recently conceded, ''very flaky.'' But
the Wisconsin professor, a longtime meditator himself he took leave
from graduate school to travel through India and Sri Lanka to learn Eastern
meditation practices leapt at the opportunity. In September 1992,
he organized and embarked on an ambitious data-gathering expedition to
northern India, lugging portable electrical generators, laptop computers
and electroencephalographic (EEG) recording equipment into the foothills
of the Himalayas. His goal was to measure a remarkable, if seemingly evanescent,
entity: the neural characteristics of the Buddhist mind at work. ''These
are the Olympic athletes, the gold medalists, of meditation,'' Davidson
says.
The work began fitfully the monks initially balked at being wired
but research into meditation has now attained a credibility unimaginable
a decade ago. Over the past 10 years, a number of Buddhist monks, led
by Matthieu Ricard, a French-born monk with a Ph.D. in molecular biology,
have made a series of visits from northern India and other South Asian
countries to Davidson's lab in Madison. Ricard and his peers have worn
a Medusa-like tangle of 256-electrode EEG nets while sitting on the floor
of a little booth and responding to visual stimuli. They have spent two
to three hours at a time in a magnetic resonance imaging machine, trying
to meditate amid the clatter and thrum of the brain-imaging machinery.
No data from these experiments have been published formally yet, but in
''Visions of Compassion,'' a compilation of papers that came out last
year, Davidson noted in passing that in one visiting monk, activation
in several regions of his left prefrontal cortex an area of the
brain just behind the forehead that recent research has associated with
positive emotion was the most intense seen in about 175 experimental
subjects.
In the years since Davidson's fax from the Dalai Lama, the neuroscientific
study of Buddhist practices has crossed a threshold of acceptability as
a topic worthy of scientific attention. Part of the reason for this lies
in new, more powerful brain-scanning technologies that not only can reveal
a mind in the midst of meditation but also can detect enduring changes
in brain activity months after a prolonged course of meditation. And it
hasn't hurt that some well-known mainstream neuroscientists are now intrigued
by preliminary reports of exceptional Buddhist mental skills. Paul Ekman
of the University of California at San Francisco and Stephen Kosslyn of
Harvard have begun their own studies of the mental capabilities of monks.
In addition, a few rigorous, controlled studies have suggested that Buddhist-style
meditation in Western patients may cause physiological changes in the
brain and the immune system.
This growing, if sometimes grudging, respect for the biology of meditation
is achieving a milestone of sorts this weekend, when some of the country's
leading neuroscientists and behavioral scientists are meeting with Tibetan
Buddhists, including the Dalai Lama himself, at a symposium held at M.I.T.
''You can think of the monks as cases that show what the potential is
here,'' Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn, an emeritus professor of medicine at the University
of Massachusetts Medical School who has pioneered work in the health benefits
of meditation, says. ''But you don't have to be weird or a Buddhist or
sitting on top of a mountain in India to derive benefits from this. This
kind of study is in its infancy, but we're on the verge of discovering
hugely fascinating things.''
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FREE Talk and Guided Meditation
Monday, Sept 13
Creating a Joyful Life
at the NY New Church
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