Modulation of event-related potentials of visual discrimination by meditation training and sustained attention
Autor: | Zanesco, Anthony, Saron, Clifford, King, Brandon, Wineberg, Kezia, De Meo, Rosanna, Powers, Chivon, MacLean, Katherine |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology
MindRxiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive Psychology MindRxiv|Life Sciences education MindRxiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognition and Perception MindRxiv|Life Sciences|Neuroscience and Neurobiology MindRxiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognitive Psychology MindRxiv|Life Sciences|Neuroscience and Neurobiology|Cognitive Neuroscience bepress|Life Sciences|Neuroscience and Neurobiology bepress|Life Sciences bepress|Social and Behavioral Sciences bepress|Life Sciences|Neuroscience and Neurobiology|Cognitive Neuroscience MindRxiv|Social and Behavioral Sciences|Psychology|Cognition and Perception |
DOI: | 10.31231/osf.io/9a4yd |
Popis: | The ability to discriminate among goal-relevant stimuli tends to diminish when detections must be made continuously over time. Previously, we reported that intensive training in shamatha (focused-attention) meditation can improve perceptual discrimination of difficult-to-detect visual stimuli (MacLean et al., 2010). Here we extend these findings to examine how discrimination difficulty and meditation training interact to modulate event-related potentials of attention and perceptual processing during vigilance. Training and wait-list participants completed a continuous performance task (CPT) at the beginning, middle, and end of two 3-month meditation interventions. In the first intervention (Retreat 1), the CPT target was adjusted across assessments to match training-related changes in participants’ perceptual capacity. In the second intervention (Retreat 2), the target was held constant across training, irrespective of changes in discrimination capacity. No training effects were observed in Retreat 1, whereas Retreat 2 was associated with changes in the onset of early sensory signals and an attenuation of within-task decrements at early latencies. In addition, changes at later stimulus processing stages were directly correlated with improvements in perceptual threshold across the second intervention. Overall, these findings demonstrate that improvements in perceptual discrimination can modulate electrophysiological markers of perceptual processing and attentional control during sustained attention, but likely only under conditions where an individuals’ discrimination capacity is allowed to exceed the demand imposed by the difficulty of a visual target. These results contribute to basic understanding of the dependence of perceptual processing and attentional control to contextual demands, and their susceptibility to directed mental training. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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