Skip to content

Ruchika S Prakash

Department of Psychology & Center for Cognitive and Behavioral Brain Imaging, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.

4 papers in the library · 42 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Default Mode Network Functional Connectivity As a Transdiagnostic Biomarker of Cognitive Function.

Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging April 1, 2025 Vaibhav Tripathi, Ishaan Batta, Andre Zamani et al. 23 citations

The default mode network (DMN) is linked to self-referential thinking, memory, and goal-directed cognition. Its functional connectivity with frontoparietal networks involved in attention and executive control may indicate cognitive health. This review examines DMN connectivity metrics as potential biomarkers across states like attention, mind wandering, and meditation, and in conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, depression, and ADHD. It also addresses the reliability of network estimation and offers recommendations for using functional connectivity measures as biomarkers of cognitive health.

Mindfulness Meditation and Network Neuroscience: Review, Synthesis, and Future Directions.

Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging April 1, 2025 Ruchika S Prakash, Anita Shankar, Vaibhav Tripathi et al. 13 citations

Network neuroscience examines brain organization by mapping connections between its elements. This review describes how mindfulness meditation may alter structural and functional brain networks. Although evidence is preliminary, studies suggest mindfulness shifts connector hubs—the anterior cingulate cortex, thalamus, and mid-insula—and reduces intraconnectivity within the default mode network. Global connectivity findings are mixed. The authors call for rigorous study designs, open science, and diverse samples to better understand mindfulness's impact on brain networks.

ENIGMA-Meditation: Worldwide Consortium for Neuroscientific Investigations of Meditation Practices.

Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging April 1, 2025 Saampras Ganesan, Fernando A Barrios, Ishaan Batta et al. 6 citations

Meditation practices, which have shown therapeutic benefits for conditions like depression, pain, addiction, and anxiety, have been studied with neuroimaging over the past decade. However, existing neuroscientific models are based on small, heterogeneous datasets, limiting generalizability and replicability. The ENIGMA-Meditation consortium is the first worldwide collaborative effort to conduct systematic meta- and mega-analyses of globally distributed neuroimaging data using standardized methods. This framework aims to improve statistical power and address multidomain heterogeneity in meditation practice types, experience, and experimental design. The consortium will generate rigorous neuroscientific insights into the mechanisms underlying meditation's therapeutic effects on psychological and cognitive attributes.

Effects of mindfulness training on sustained attention and mind-wandering in older adults: Results from the HealthyAgers randomized controlled trial.

The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences November 21, 2025 Megan Fisher, Madhura Phansikar, James Teng et al.

An eight-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program, compared to an active control, did not produce differential improvements in most measures of sustained attention or mind-wandering among older adults aged 65-85. A small effect was observed for self-reported task-unrelated thoughts. Both groups showed improvements over time on the Go/No-Go task, and group differences emerged on reaction time variability and the Conners Continuous Performance Test. The findings suggest that mindfulness training may not specifically enhance attentional control in older adults beyond an active control intervention.