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Andrew D Francis

2 papers in the library · 1,261 citations · publishing 2007-2009

Papers

Mental Training Affects Distribution of Limited Brain Resources

PLoS Biology May 4, 2007 Heleen A. Slagter, Antoine Lutz, Lawrence L. Greischar et al. 762 citations

Intensive meditation training reduces the attentional blink—a phenomenon where a second target in a rapid stream is often missed when it appears shortly after a first target. Three months of daily mental practice led to a smaller attentional blink and decreased brain-resource allocation to the first target, measured by a smaller P3b brain potential. Individuals with the largest reduction in resource allocation to the first target showed the greatest improvement in detecting the second target. These findings indicate that mental training enhances control over limited attentional resources and supports lifelong brain plasticity.

Mental Training Enhances Attentional Stability: Neural and Behavioral Evidence

Journal of Neuroscience October 21, 2009 Antoine Lutz, Heleen A. Slagter, Nancy B. Rawlings et al. 499 citations

Three months of intensive meditation training improved the ability to sustain attention, as measured by dichotic listening task performance and electroencephalography. Training reduced variability in attentional processing of target tones, shown by enhanced theta-band phase consistency of neural responses over anterior brain areas and reduced reaction time variability. Individuals with the greatest increase in neural response consistency showed the largest decrease in behavioral response variability. Reduced variability in neural processing also occurred for unattended deviant tones, suggesting meditation affects both distracter and target processing, possibly by enhancing entrainment of neuronal oscillations to sensory input rhythms.