Fred Travis, Joe Tecce, Alarik Arenander, R. Keith
Wallace, (in press) Patterns of EEG Coherence, Power, and Contingent
Negative Variation Characterize the Integration of Transcendental
and Waking States. Biological Psychology.
Abstract:
Long-term meditating subjects report that transcendental experiences,
which first occurred during their Transcendental Meditation practice,
now subjectively co-exist with waking and sleeping states. To
investigate neurophysiological correlates of this integrated state,
we recorded EEG in these subjects and in two comparison groups
during simple and choice contingent negative variation (CNV) tasks.
In individuals reporting the integration of the transcendent with
waking and sleeping, CNV was higher in simple but lower in choice
trials, and 6-12Hz EEG amplitude and broadband frontal EEG coherence
were higher during choice trials. Increased EEG amplitude and
coherence, characteristic of TM practice, appeared to become a
stable EEG trait during CNV tasks in these subjects. These significant
EEG differences may underlie the inverse patterns in CNV amplitude
seen between groups. An Integration Scale,
constructed from these cortical measures, may characterize
the transformation in brain dynamics corresponding to increasing
integration of the transcendent with waking and sleeping.