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Tobias Stalder

Department of Psychology, University of Siegen, 57076 Siegen, Germany.

2 papers in the library · 2 citations · publishing 2020-2025

Papers

Possible Anti-Aging and Anti-Stress Effects of Long-Term Transcendental Meditation Practice: Differences in Gene Expression, EEG Correlates of Cognitive Function, and Hair Steroids.

Biomolecules February 20, 2025 Supaya Wenuganen, Kenneth G Walton, Frederick T Travis et al. 2 citations

Long-term Transcendental Meditation practice is associated with reduced biomarkers of chronic stress and biological aging. In a comparison of older long-term meditators (average 40 years of practice) with age-matched non-meditators, 7 of 13 genes that were more highly expressed in older controls showed lower expression in the older meditators. Older meditators also scored higher on a brain integration scale and had shorter event-related potential latencies—indicating faster cognitive processing—than age-matched controls, with latencies no longer than those of young non-meditators. Hair cortisol levels were lower in meditators than in matched controls, suggesting lower cumulative stress exposure.

Contemplative mental training reduces hair glucocorticoid levels in a randomized clinical trial

bioRxiv Preprint Server November 13, 2020 Lara M.c. Puhlmann, Pascal Vrtička, Roman Linz et al. preprint

Regular contemplative mental training may reduce long-term stress as indicated by endocrine markers, though the abstract does not specify the direction or magnitude of the effect. The study aimed to investigate how such training influences stress-related hormone levels.