Increased default mode network connectivity associated with meditation
Neuroscience Letters October 28, 2010 Joon Hwan Jang, Wi Hoon Jung, Do‐hyung Kang et al. 267 citations
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Seoul National University College of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, Seoul, Republic of Korea. Electronic address: kwonjs@snu.ac.kr.
3 papers in the library · 433 citations · publishing 2010-2016
Neuroscience Letters October 28, 2010 Joon Hwan Jang, Wi Hoon Jung, Do‐hyung Kang et al. 267 citations
No Summary
Schizophrenia research January 1, 2014 Ji-Won Hur, Jun Soo Kwon, Tae Young Lee et al. 165 citations
People with schizophrenia experience significant disturbances in the minimal self, particularly in the sense of body ownership and sense of agency. A meta-analysis of 25 studies (690 patients, 979 controls) found a moderate overall effect (Hedge's g = 0.51) indicating basic self-disturbance. Body ownership showed a large effect (0.91), agency a moderate effect (0.49), and self-reported subjective experiences a moderate effect (0.57). The disturbed sense of agency suggests exaggerated self-consciousness rather than a diminished sense of self. Results remained significant after correcting for publication bias.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology May 27, 2016 Jee-Hyung Suh, Tae Young Lee, Jun Soo Kwon 1 citation
Psilocybin, a hallucinogen that mimics psychotic symptoms, alters brain connectivity in ways similar to psychosis. In a double-blind placebo-controlled trial with 20 healthy subjects, standard coherence analysis showed decreased connectivity in theta, alpha, and beta brainwave bands, particularly in frontotemporal and frontoparietal regions, along with frontal interhemispheric disconnection. Changes in higher frequencies were less significant and often opposite. In contrast, eLORETA connectivity analysis found no changes in lower frequencies but increased connectivity in high gamma (50-100 Hz). These preliminary results suggest psilocybin-induced connectivity changes align with those seen in psychotic patients.