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Fynn-Mathis Trautwein

11 papers in the library · 379 citations · publishing 2016-2025

Papers

The Hitchhiker's Guide to Neurophenomenology - The Case of Studying Self Boundaries With Meditators.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2020 Aviva Berkovich-Ohana, Yair Dor-Ziderman, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein et al. 101 citations

Neurophenomenology integrates first-person (subjective) and third-person (objective) approaches to the mind. This practical guide outlines theoretical principles, the importance of phenomenological training, and the utility of cooperating with meditators as skilled participants. First-person accounts range from thick to thin phenomenology, highlighting a tension in naturalizing phenomenology. A typology of bridges creates mutual constraints between approaches. The paper demonstrates a decade of neurophenomenological studies investigating the sense of self, focusing on its embodied and minimal aspects accessed via dissolution of sense-of-boundaries, revealing the multi-dimensionality and flexibility of embodied selfhood.

Self-Boundary Dissolution in Meditation: A Phenomenological Investigation.

Brain sciences June 21, 2021 Ohad Nave, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein, Yochai Ataria et al. 91 citations

A fundamental aspect of the sense of self is its pre-reflective dimension, which specifies the self as a bounded and embodied knower and agent. Deep meditative states involving global dissolution of the sense of self offer a promising path for investigating this elusive feature. A comprehensive phenomenological inquiry into meditative self-boundary alteration systematically characterized induced states by changes in six experiential features: sense of location, agency, first-person perspective, attention, body sensations, and affective valence, along with their interaction with meditative technique and overall degree of dissolution. Quantitative analyses highlighted a unitary dimension of boundary dissolution.

The (In)flexible self: Psychopathology, mindfulness, and neuroscience.

International journal of clinical and health psychology : IJCHP January 1, 2023 Fabio Giommi, Prisca R Bauer, Aviva Berkovich-Ohana et al. 70 citations

Rigidity, or inflexibility, is a core feature of transdiagnostic processes underlying many mental health disorders. The pattern theory of self (PTS) defines the self as a dynamic, nonlinear pattern of multiple interacting processes. Mindfulness-Based Interventions (MBIs) can reduce rigid, habitual self-patterns, thereby improving mental health. MBIs alter psychological and behavioral aspects of the self-pattern and can shift the entire self-pattern as a gestalt. Neuroscientific evidence shows that the phenomenology of the self is reflected in cortical networks, and meditation alters these networks. Combining PTS and neuroscientific findings may deepen understanding of psychopathology and improve diagnosis and treatment.

Decentering the Self? Reduced Bias in Self- vs. Other-Related Processing in Long-Term Practitioners of Loving-Kindness Meditation

Frontiers in Psychology November 21, 2016 Fynn-Mathis Trautwein, José R. Naranjo, Stefan Schmidt 44 citations

Long-term practitioners of loving-kindness meditation show a reduced difference in brain responses to their own face versus a close other's face, measured by the P300 event-related potential. In 12 meditators and 12 matched controls, the typical pattern of a larger P300 for self than other was smaller in meditators at parietal brain sites. Among meditators, more meditation practice correlated with smaller self-other differences, and across both groups, smaller differences were linked to higher self-reported compassion. A brief loving-kindness meditation induction did not further alter this brain response. The findings suggest that extensive meditation practice may blur the neural distinction between self and other and is associated with greater compassion.

Suspending the Embodied Self in Meditation Attenuates Beta Oscillations in the Posterior Medial Cortex.

The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience June 26, 2024 Fynn-Mathis Trautwein, Yoav Schweitzer, Yair Dor-Ziderman et al. 27 citations

Long-term meditators can intentionally reduce the sense of being an embodied self, and this change is linked to decreased high-beta brain activity in the posterior medial cortex. In a study of 46 experienced meditators (19 female, 27 male) who underwent magnetoencephalographic monitoring, those who reported radical disruptions of embodied self-experience—such as loss of agency and a localized first-person perspective—showed the strongest neural reductions. These neural changes correlated with lifetime meditation experience and interview-based reports of experiential shifts, but not with standard self-report questionnaires. The findings suggest that posterior medial cortex oscillations are central to supporting the embodied sense of self.

An Overview of Neurophenomenological Approaches to Meditation and Their Relevance to Clinical Research.

Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging April 1, 2025 Antoine Lutz, Oussama Abdoun, Yair Dor-Ziderman et al. 18 citations

The neurophenomenology research program, pioneered by Varela, rigorously examines subjective experience using first-person methodologies inspired by phenomenology and contemplative practices. This review explores recent advancements, particularly their application to meditation practices and potential clinical translations. It examines innovative multidimensional phenomenological assessment tools designed to capture subtle, dynamic shifts in experiential content and structures of consciousness during meditation, shedding light on mechanisms and trajectories of meditation practice.

Training the embodied self in its impermanence: meditators evidence neurophysiological markers of death acceptance.

Neuroscience of consciousness January 1, 2025 Yair Dor-Ziderman, Yoav Schweitzer, Ohad Nave et al. 10 citations

Meditators' brains show acceptance rather than denial when processing death-related stimuli linked to the self, as measured by a magnetoencephalogram visual mismatch-response (vMMR) paradigm. This neural shift corresponds with increased self-reported well-being and is associated with positively valenced experiences of self-dissolution during meditation. The findings suggest that the brain's defensive response to mortality is not fixed but can be reduced through insight meditation grounded in mindful awareness, which trains acceptance of impermanence. The results also indicate that addressing mortality concerns is important when interventions may disrupt self-consciousness.

Meditation-Induced Self-Boundary Flexibility and Prosociality: A MEG and Behavioral Measures Study.

Brain sciences November 26, 2024 Yoav Schweitzer, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein, Yair Dor-Ziderman et al. 7 citations

Long-term meditators show enhanced low-level prosocial capacities, including better emotion recognition and reduced outgroup bias, compared to non-meditators. A neural index of self-boundary flexibility, measured via high beta deactivation, remained stable over a year and negatively correlated with recognizing negative emotions, suggesting a link to reduced social threat perception. The study involved 44 long-term meditators and 53 controls. These findings connect the neural correlates of self-boundary flexibility to prosociality, supporting the idea that flexing self-boundaries through meditation may enhance prosocial traits.

Neurophenomenology in Action: Integrating the First-Person Perspective into the Libet Experiment

Mindfulness August 1, 2024 Stefan Schmidt, Prisca R. Bauer, Fynn-Mathis Trautwein 4 citations

Integrating first-person reports with standard cognitive experiments can bridge the gap between subjective experience and neuroscientific accounts. Using the Libet task on voluntary action, where a readiness potential precedes a participant's self-timed movement, the authors propose a neurophenomenological approach that combines three methods: adapting the Libet paradigm, employing micro-phenomenological interviews, and collaborating with experienced meditators. This framework aims to develop a more coherent account of volitional action, challenging the notion that decisions are predetermined by brain processes alone. The approach suggests meditation enhances self-regulation and self-determination, leading to more deliberate decisions and ethical behavior.

An overview of neurophenomenological approaches to meditation and their relevance to clinical research

PsyArXiv June 11, 2024 Antoine Lutz, Oussama Abdoun, Yair Dor-Ziderman et al. 4 citations preprint

A review of recent advances in neurophenomenology, a research program that rigorously examines subjective experience using first-person methods inspired by phenomenology and contemplative practices. The review covers three areas: new multidimensional tools for capturing dynamic changes in consciousness during meditation; empirical studies using experienced meditators to deconstruct aversive and self-related processes, revealing markers for pain regulation, self-dissolution, and acceptance of mortality; and a deep computational neurophenomenology framework that uses deep parametric active inference to naturalize phenomenology. These innovations suggest that mutual constraints among phenomenological, computational, and neurophysiological domains can contribute to an integrated understanding of mental illness and its treatment.