Awakening Is Not a Metaphor: The Effects of Buddhist Meditation Practices on Basic Wakefulness
By Willoughby B. Britton, Jared R. Lindahl, B. Rael Cahn, Jake H. Davis, and Roberta E. Goldman
18 pagesIn an attempt to counterbalance the plethora of data demonstrating the relaxing and hypoarousing effects of Buddhist meditation, this interdisciplinary review aims to provide evidence of meditation’s arousing or wake-promoting effects by drawing both from Buddhist textual sources and from scientific studies, including subjective, behavioral, and neuroimaging studies during wakefulness, meditation, and sleep.
The course of meditative progress suggests a nonlinear multiphasic trajectory, such that early phases that are more effortful may produce more fatigue and sleep propensity, while later stages produce greater wakefulness as a result of neuroplastic changes and more efficient processing.