Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Cognitive Science

Meditation practices enhance top-down ability to control attention, study finds

by Eric W. Dolan
December 6, 2020
in Cognitive Science, Meditation
(Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay)

(Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay)

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Don't miss out! Follow PsyPost on Bluesky!

An intensive meditation retreat improved controlled attention among those who had attended for five weeks, according to a new longitudinal, waitlist-controlled study. The study, published in Brain, Behavior, and Immunity, also found evidence that higher inflammatory activity was related to worse attentional control.

“In most of my work, I study how stress and related factors influence cognitive processes, including executive functions, and the (overgeneralized) general finding is that stress impairs them,” explained study author Grant Shields, an assistant professor at the University of Arkansas and director of the SCAN Lab.

“I have become increasingly interested in discovering which interventions or factors might improve those same cognitive processes, and meditation is often suggested as something that improves executive functions. I wanted to test that, and to test it precisely using a computational model.”

“I am also interested in understanding how the immune system might influence cognitive processes, so I wanted to examine immune system processes that contribute to inflammation in relation to the other variables in this study,” Shields said.

In the study, 60 participants were randomly assigned to either immediately attend a three-month meditation retreat or to serve as waiting-list controls. Three months after the first retreat ended, those in the control group completed their own identical three-month meditation retreat. During the retreats, the participants practiced shamatha meditation for about six hours per day.

The researchers had the participants complete a computer-based flanker task to assess their ability to maintain focus roughly five weeks after the start of the first retreat. In the task, participants were asked to make quick responses to a central target stimulus, while ignoring irrelevant stimuli that flanked the target.

The team of scientists also collected blood samples at the beginning, middle, and end of the retreats to measure inflammatory biomarkers.

The researchers observed significantly greater attention to goal-relevant information — in this case the target stimulus — in those who had completed five weeks of meditation training compared to the waitlist control group. Similarly, those in the control group showed improvements in attention after they completed their own meditation training.

The findings indicate that “meditation retreats focused on controlled meditative practices enhance the ‘top-down’ (e.g., voluntary) ability to control your attention,” Shields told PsyPost. “Though this oversteps the data, I would presume that this result likely extends to other cognitive processes.”

“In addition, immune system activity responsible for inflammation was inversely associated with this cognitive ability, entailing that interventions (e.g., diet) that downregulate inflammatory immune system activity may enhance top-down control of attention (though we did not test this directly),” Shields added.

“Although we did not examine which components of the intervention were most responsible for this effect, I would guess that it occurred due to meditative practice itself, rather than other aspects of the retreat.”

But the study — like all research — includes some limitations.

“The major caveats are that we did not examine which aspects of the intervention were responsible for this enhancing effect, nor did we experimentally manipulate immune system activity to assess the effects of the immune system on cognition in ways that would allow us to make causal inferences,” Shields explained.

The research was conducted in collaboration with the Center for Mind and Brain at the University of California, Davis.

“This excellent project was headed by Cliff Saron’s team, and I was fortunate enough to be able to work with their existing data when I approached Cliff with the ideas I wanted to test. I did not have a hand in the study design,” Shields said.

The study, “Deconstructing the effects of concentration meditation practice on interference control: The roles of controlled attention and inflammatory activity“, was authored by Grant S. Shields, Alea C. Skwara, Brandon G. King, Anthony P. Zanesco, Firdaus S. Dhabhar, and Clifford D. Saron.

(Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay)

TweetSendScanShareSendPin7ShareShareShareShareShare

RELATED

Even in healthy adults, high blood sugar levels are linked to impaired brain function
Memory

Neuroscientists decode how people juggle multiple items in working memory

July 8, 2025

New neuroscience research shows how the brain decides which memories deserve more attention. By tracking brain activity, scientists found that the frontal cortex helps direct limited memory resources, allowing people to remember high-priority information more precisely than less relevant details.

Read moreDetails
New study uncovers a surprising effect of cold-water immersion
Cognitive Science

New study uncovers a surprising effect of cold-water immersion

July 8, 2025

Cold-water immersion increases energy expenditure—but it may also drive people to eat more afterward. A study in Physiology & Behavior found participants consumed significantly more food following cold exposure, possibly due to internal cooling effects that continue after leaving the water.

Read moreDetails
Positive attitudes toward AI linked to more prone to problematic social media use
Cognitive Science

People with higher cognitive ability have weaker moral foundations, new study finds

July 7, 2025

A large study has found that individuals with greater cognitive ability are less likely to endorse moral values such as compassion, fairness, loyalty, and purity. The results point to a consistent negative relationship between intelligence and moral intuitions.

Read moreDetails
These common sounds can impair your learning, according to new psychology research
Meditation

A simple breathing exercise enhances emotional control, new research suggests

July 4, 2025

Feeling overwhelmed? New research suggests just three minutes of slow-paced breathing can significantly improve your ability to manage negative emotions.

Read moreDetails
These common sounds can impair your learning, according to new psychology research
Cognitive Science

These common sounds can impair your learning, according to new psychology research

July 4, 2025

Your brain’s ancient defense system might be sabotaging your test scores. New research suggests our "behavioral immune system," which makes us subconsciously alert to signs of illness, can be triggered by coughs and sniffles.

Read moreDetails
From fireflies to brain cells: Unraveling the complex web of synchrony in networks
Addiction

Understanding “neuronal ensembles” could revolutionize addiction treatment

July 3, 2025

The same brain system that rewards you for a delicious meal is hijacked by drugs like fentanyl. A behavioral neuroscientist explains how understanding the specific memories behind these rewards is the key to treating addiction without harming our essential survival instincts.

Read moreDetails
Scientists just uncovered a surprising illusion in how we remember time
Memory

Scientists just uncovered a surprising illusion in how we remember time

July 3, 2025

Our perception of time is more fragile than we think. Scientists have uncovered a powerful illusion where repeated exposure to information makes us misremember it as happening much further in the past, significantly distorting our mental timelines.

Read moreDetails
Peppermint tea boosts memory and attention—but why?
Cognitive Science

Peppermint tea boosts memory and attention—but why?

July 2, 2025

Can a cup of peppermint tea sharpen your mind? A new study suggests it can—but not in the way scientists expected. Improved memory and attention followed the tea, but increased brain blood flow wasn't the reason why.

Read moreDetails

SUBSCRIBE

Go Ad-Free! Click here to subscribe to PsyPost and support independent science journalism!

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Neuroscientists decode how people juggle multiple items in working memory

Inside the bored brain: Unlocking the power of the default mode network

Choline imbalance in the brain linked to with cognitive symptoms in young depression patients

Scientists who relocate more often start Nobel research up to two years earlier

Sedentary time linked to faster brain aging in older adults, study finds

People with short-video addiction show altered brain responses during decision-making

New study uncovers a surprising effect of cold-water immersion

Being adopted doesn’t change how teens handle love and dating

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy