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Proposed Model
of TM practice, December 26, 2002:
This model of TM practice is based on the two-phase model in Travis and Wallace,
Consciousness and Cognition, 1999. It has been refined in conversations with Dr. Alarik Arenander
and in lectures to the Maharishi Vedic Medicine students.
The
first phase—Neural switch:
Transcending during the inward stroke
of TM practice begins with basal forebrain activating the nucleus
reticularis thalami (NRT: the gate of thalamic output) which
dampens down thalamic output to the cortex.
The NRT covers the back
(dorsal), sides (lateral), and bottom (ventral) nuclei of the thalamus—where
sensory and motor inputs pass through the thalamus to the cortex.
However, thalamic nuclei that modulate alertness levels are not
covered by the NRT: the intralaminar nuclei ( governs
how “bright the light is” or general wakefulness level. It is the
extension of the reticular activation system in the brain stem);
anterior nuclei (part of the limbic-cingulate circuit that
is part of the emotion loop) medial dorsal nucleus (feedback
loop with frontal cortices to maintain level of wakefulness in executive
frontal processing areas); and centromedian (feedback loop
with frontal and basal ganglia).
The EEG signature of this process
is global alpha power and high EEG coherence (Travis, International
Journal of Psychophysiology, 2001).
The EEG signature changes within one or two seconds of beginning
a 20-minute TM session. It is like flipping a “neural switch.” Other researches suggest that TM involves successive
orienting/habituation cycles overtime (Arenander, 1997, Tucson conference).
If this were the case, (1) the changes in EEG and physiology
would gradually change rather than emerge very quickly (about one
second), (2) you would expect to see the EEG of orienting, which
is decreased alpha EEG. Since these are not seen, if seems that the “neural switch” model
better explains the beginning of TM.
The second phase: Effortless
maintenance of the state of restful alertness resulting from the
first phase of TM.
Those thalamic nuclei that are not
covered by the NRT (intralaminar nuclei, anterior nuclei,
medial dorsal nucleus, and the centromedian) can continue in their
function—to maintain alertness levels in the absence of specific
content. These are self-referral circuits—the cortex signals the
thalamus, and the thalamus echoes back. These feedbackloops may
maintain the state of restful alertness during TM practice.
TM practice exercises these “restful
alert” circuits through use. Over time, these circuits may become
self-sustaining, so that they can continue in their self-referral
“murmuring” even as content comes through the thalamus, up to the
cortex, and into consciousness awareness. Then self awareness, alertness,
Being, co-exist with ever-changing experience. Outer activity is
experienced on the ground of inner unboundedness and silence. This
is the state of enlightenment. (See Travis et al, Biological
Psychology, 2002).
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