Global Effect on Cortical Activity in Young Indian Males in Response to "OM" Chanting: A High-Density Quantitative Electro-Encephalography Study.

IF 1.8 Q4 NEUROSCIENCES Annals of Neurosciences Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2023-08-17 DOI:10.1177/09727531231183219
Manorma Saini, Ankit Gurjar, Suriya Prakash Muthukrishnan, Simran Kaur, Ratna Sharma, Prashant T Tayade
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Abstract

Background: Meditation using the "OM" mantra is the most widely used practice in India. Though reports have been published about the relaxation effect during both verbal "OM" chanting and listening to "OM" chanting, there is a paucity of literature concerning the cortical areas activated/deactivated after verbal "OM" chanting and listening to "OM" chanting using quantitative electro-encephalography (qEEG).

Purpose: The objective of this study was to compare the effects of verbal "OM" chanting and listening to "OM" chanting on cortical sources as compared to baseline, as assessed by qEEG.

Method: Twenty adult male subjects with a mean age of 27.5 ± 7.5 years and no past or present history of psychiatric, neurological, or auditory disorders or previous exposure to yoga and meditation were recruited from the undergraduate and postgraduate student population of AIIMS, New Delhi. Subjects were given a paradigm designed using E-prime for both verbal and listening to "OM" chanting of 5 min each and a 5-min relaxation period in between the tasks. Electroencephalography recording was done using a 128-channel geodesic sensor net with band-pass filtered at 1-70 Hz, and 20-sec data of eyes-closed condition, post-verbal "OM", and post-listening to "OM" chanting were segmented and pre-processed. Further, source analysis was performed on the data using standardized low-resolution electromagnetic tomography.

Result: The pre (baseline) versus post-verbal "OM" (p < .05) and post-listening to "OM" (p < .05) chanting showed significant differences in similar cortical areas in both verbal "OM" and listening to "OM" chanting except the three areas, that is, the orbital gyrus, the rectal gyrus, and the sub-callosal gyrus, which were additionally activated post-listening to "OM" chanting. Both verbal and listening to "OM" chanting induced activation of similar cortical areas, which were classified as the nodes/hubs of specific resting-state networks (RSNs) such as the attentional network, frontoparietal control network, and default mode network.

Conclusion: The study results suggest that "OM" chanting could facilitate flexible switching between various RSNs to induce a relaxed state and could improve attention simultaneously.Both verbal and listening to "OM" chanting induced common activated areas that are classified into frontoparietal, dorsal attention, and default mode network areas. And it is hypothesized that flexible switching between these RSNs could induce a relaxed state and improve attention simultaneously with the possible role of the frontoparietal network.

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印度青年男性对“OM”吟唱的皮层活动的整体影响:一项高密度定量脑电图研究
在印度,使用“唵”咒语的冥想是最广泛使用的练习。虽然已经发表了关于口头“OM”吟诵和听“OM”吟诵期间的放松效果的报告,但使用定量脑电图(qEEG)研究口头“OM”吟诵和听“OM”吟诵后皮层激活/失活的文献很少。本研究的目的是比较口头“OM”吟唱和听“OM”吟唱对皮质源的影响,与基线相比,通过qEEG评估。从新德里AIIMS的本科生和研究生人群中招募了20名成年男性受试者,平均年龄为27.5±7.5岁,过去或现在没有精神、神经或听觉障碍病史,也没有瑜伽和冥想的经历。实验对象被赋予一个使用E-prime设计的范式,用于口头和听诵“OM”,各5分钟,任务之间有5分钟的放松期。采用128通道带通滤波1-70 Hz的测地线传感器网进行脑电图记录,对闭眼状态、念完“OM”后和听完“OM”后的20秒数据进行分割和预处理。此外,使用标准化的低分辨率电磁层析成像对数据进行源分析。诵读前(基线)与诵读后(p < 0.05)和诵读后(p < 0.05)相比,诵读前(基线)和诵读后(p < 0.05)在诵读“OM”和听“OM”时,除了眶回、直肠回和胼胝体下回三个区域在听“OM”诵读后被额外激活外,其他相似的皮质区域均存在显著差异。口头和听“OM”诵经都诱发了类似的皮层区域的激活,这些区域被归类为特定静息状态网络(rsn)的节点/枢纽,如注意网络、额顶叶控制网络和默认模式网络。研究结果表明,念诵“OM”可以促进各种rsn之间的灵活切换,从而诱导放松状态,同时可以提高注意力。口头和听“OM”诵经都会引起共同的激活区域,这些区域分为额顶叶、背侧注意和默认模式网络区域。假设这些rsn之间的灵活切换可以诱导放松状态并同时提高注意力,这可能与额顶叶网络的作用有关。
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来源期刊
Annals of Neurosciences
Annals of Neurosciences NEUROSCIENCES-
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
39
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