# Does Meditation Actually Change the Brain

Scientific evidence confirms that meditation rapidly alters brain activity and strengthens functional neural networks related to focus, emotional regulation, and memory. However, recent large-scale research has challenged older claims that brief mindfulness programs physically grow or reshape the brain's structural gray matter, suggesting that the most significant everyday benefits stem from how the brain operates and communicates rather than how it physically looks.



For thousands of years, the idea that sitting quietly and engaging in contemplative practices could transform the mind was verified only through the subjective, internal experiences of practitioners. Today, contemplative neuroscience is a booming academic field. Researchers at the world's top institutions are utilizing functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), deep-brain intracranial electrodes, and advanced blood plasma analysis to map exactly what happens inside the heads of meditating monks and stressed-out novices alike [cite: 1, 2, 3]. 

The emerging data reveals a fascinating, yet highly nuanced, picture. Meditation is not a magic pill, nor is it a single, uniform activity. Instead, it functions more like a targeted mental workout. Just as different physical exercises build different muscle groups, distinct meditation techniques train distinct neural pathways [cite: 4, 5]. 

However, as the science has matured, the field has also faced a reckoning. Over the past few years, more rigorous, large-scale studies have overturned some of the most sensationalized media claims about meditation physically bulking up brain tissue in a matter of weeks. To understand what meditation actually does, we must look past the media hype and examine the latest clinical data on neuroplasticity, brainwave states, and the brain's surprisingly literal self-cleaning mechanisms.

## The Neuroplasticity Debate: Structure vs. Function

If you have read anything about mindfulness in the last decade, you have likely encountered the claim that an eight-week meditation course will physically increase the thickness of your brain's gray matter and shrink your amygdala, the brain's primary threat detection center. 

This compelling narrative was born from early neuroimaging studies in the 2000s and early 2010s, which observed structural differences when comparing the brains of long-term expert meditators to those of non-meditators [cite: 6, 7, 8]. The popular media quickly translated "neuroplasticity"—the brain's lifelong ability to form new neural connections—into the idea that a casual daily meditation habit could physically remodel the architecture of your brain in just two months [cite: 9, 10].

### The 2022 Replication Crisis

The scientific reality of structural brain changes is far more complex and heavily debated. In 2022, a landmark study published in the journal *Science Advances* by researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (including prominent neuroscientist Richard Davidson) upended the established narrative regarding short-term structural growth [cite: 7, 10, 11]. 

The research team set out to directly replicate the famous older findings that the standard 8-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program alters brain structure. Utilizing the largest and most rigorously controlled dataset to date, the researchers examined 218 meditation-naïve participants. To eliminate placebo effects and generalized wellness benefits, they utilized three arms: an active MBSR group, a waitlist control group, and a highly validated active control group matched for time and attention [cite: 11, 12]. 

The results were definitive: the researchers found absolutely no evidence that eight weeks of mindfulness produced structural or neuroplastic changes in gray matter volume, gray matter density, or cortical thickness [cite: 7, 11]. This failure to replicate extended to the whole-brain level as well as specifically targeted regions of interest like the amygdala and prefrontal cortex [cite: 11].

### Shifting Focus to Functional Connectivity

Does this lack of structural growth mean short-term meditation is useless? Not at all. The researchers were quick to note that while the physical *hardware* of the brain did not measurably grow or shrink in eight weeks, the *software*—how the brain functions, communicates, and regulates emotion—demonstrated substantial improvements [cite: 10, 12]. 

When leading neuroscientists talk about the benefits of neuroplasticity for the average practitioner today, they emphasize functional connectivity. While physically building noticeable gray matter density likely takes years of consistent, intensive practice—much like developing the physique of an elite athlete—functional benefits manifest rapidly [cite: 13, 14]. For the average person meditating for 15 to 20 minutes a day, the benefits arise because the brain's networks simply learn to communicate more efficiently and flexibly [cite: 2, 10].

## How Meditation Alters Brain Networks

If the brain isn't physically growing new lobes during your morning meditation, what is actually causing the profound reductions in anxiety, depression, and stress that practitioners consistently report? The answer lies in how meditation modulates large-scale brain networks.

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### Quieting the Default Mode Network

Cognitive neuroscientists have identified a resting-state system in the brain called the Default Mode Network (DMN), primarily involving the posterior cingulate cortex and the medial prefrontal cortex [cite: 15, 16]. The DMN is essentially the brain's "autopilot." It becomes highly active when our minds are wandering, when we are ruminating on past regrets, or when we are projecting anxieties into the future [cite: 15, 17]. 

Overactivity and hyper-connectivity within the DMN are strongly correlated with clinical anxiety, rumination, and depressive episodes, as the brain gets trapped in repetitive, self-referential thought loops [cite: 15, 16]. 

During meditation, fMRI scans show that activity within the DMN drops significantly [cite: 18, 19, 20]. As practitioners deliberately focus their attention on an anchor—such as the physical sensation of breathing—the brain shifts metabolic power away from the DMN. Instead, it activates the Central Executive Network (CEN), a system responsible for focused attention, working memory, and cognitive control [cite: 16, 21]. 

Over time, regular meditators develop enhanced microstructural integrity in their white matter tracts—the brain's insulated communication cables [cite: 5, 17]. This improved connectivity allows the Salience Network (the brain's switchboard) to more rapidly detect when the mind has wandered into unproductive DMN rumination, allowing the practitioner to consciously switch back to the present moment via the CEN [cite: 5, 16]. 

### Rapid Access to Deep Limbic Centers

It was previously assumed that it took years of rigorous monastic practice to exert any voluntary control over deep, subcortical brain regions. However, a groundbreaking 2025 study from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai proved that meditation immediately affects the deepest limbic emotion centers of the brain [cite: 1, 22]. 

Because it is incredibly difficult to measure deep brain activity accurately with standard scalp EEG sensors, researchers recruited a unique group of neurosurgical patients. These were drug-resistant epilepsy patients who already had responsive neurostimulation electrodes surgically implanted deep inside their amygdala (the emotion processing center) and hippocampus (the memory center) [cite: 1, 22]. 

The researchers asked these complete meditation novices to listen to a brief, 10-minute guided audio meditation. The results were immediate and striking. Within minutes, the intracranial sensors recorded profound shifts in neural oscillations, specifically increases in gamma waves and decreases in beta bursts directly inside the amygdala and hippocampus [cite: 1, 23]. This demonstrated that the neurological state shift begins almost the moment a person anchors their attention, proving that one does not need decades of practice to initiate deep-brain emotional regulation [cite: 22, 24].

## The Brain's Literal Self-Cleaning Mechanism

One of the most fascinating recent developments in contemplative neuroscience is the discovery that meditation may literally help wash the brain of toxic metabolic waste. 

A December 2025 study published in the *Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences* (*PNAS*) utilized novel neuroimaging methods to track the flow of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in the brains of healthy adults [cite: 25]. CSF is a clear fluid that circulates through the central nervous system, acting as a shock absorber and a vital waste removal system (the glymphatic system). It flushes out problematic metabolic byproducts, including the amyloid-beta peptides that contribute to neurodegenerative conditions like Alzheimer's, Huntington's, and Parkinson's diseases [cite: 25, 26].

Typically, this neurofluid waste-clearance system only operates at peak efficiency when we are in a state of deep, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep [cite: 25]. However, researchers at Vanderbilt University found that just 25 minutes of focused attention meditation shifted the participants' CSF flow into a highly efficient rhythm that remarkably mirrored the patterns seen during sleep [cite: 23, 25, 27]. 

Data indicates a notable decrease in absolute CSF flow motion through the cerebral aqueduct, dropping from 4.60 mL/min during states of mind-wandering down to 4.17 mL/min during focused attention meditation. Crucially, this overall reduction was driven by a specific decrease in backward, "regurgitant" fluid motion [cite: 26, 27, 28]. Because hyperdynamic and regurgitant CSF flow is commonly associated with aging and neurodegeneration, the smoothing of these fluid dynamics suggests that mindfulness serves as a rare, non-pharmacological waking mechanism capable of stimulating the brain's internal cleaning system to support long-term cognitive health [cite: 26, 27, 28].

## Not All Meditation Does the Same Thing

A pervasive public myth is that "meditation" is a single, uniform activity where the goal is to sit cross-legged and completely blank the mind of all thoughts [cite: 23]. In reality, the word "meditation" is a broad umbrella term, much like the word "sports." Playing chess and swimming are both sports, but they train entirely different cardiovascular and cognitive systems. 

Neuroscience categorizes meditation into several specific styles, each yielding highly distinct neural signatures. The Max Planck Institute conducted an exhaustive nine-month study where participants spent three months sequentially training in three different styles of meditation. Subsequent brain scans confirmed that the different techniques altered entirely different neural networks, proving that the specific type of mental practice dictates the neurobiological outcome [cite: 29, 30, 31]. 

### Comparing Major Meditation Styles and Neural Targets

| Meditation Style | Core Practice Mechanism | Primary Brain Regions Modulated | Functional Real-World Benefit |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Focused Attention (e.g., Breath Awareness, Shamatha)** | Anchoring attention to a single target. Actively returning focus when the mind inevitably wanders. | Prefrontal Cortex, Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC), Parietal Lobe [cite: 6, 18, 29, 30]. | Improved sustained attention, executive impulse control, and working memory. |
| **Open Monitoring (e.g., Vipassana, Mindfulness)** | Observing thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations as they arise without judging, suppressing, or holding onto them. | Insula, Somatosensory Cortex, Default Mode Network [cite: 6, 18, 29]. | Enhanced interoceptive self-awareness, reduced emotional reactivity, and optimal cognitive flexibility [cite: 32]. |
| **Loving-Kindness (e.g., Metta, Compassion)** | Actively generating feelings of compassion and warmth, first toward oneself, then extending outward to others. | Amygdala, Temporoparietal Junction (TPJ), Anterior Insula [cite: 6, 18, 29, 33]. | Increased empathy, elevated oxytocin, and decreased self-criticism and social anxiety [cite: 29, 33, 34]. |

When a practitioner engages in Focused Attention meditation, they are essentially performing "bicep curls" for their prefrontal cortex, actively strengthening their top-down executive control over distractions [cite: 4, 21]. 

Conversely, Loving-Kindness is an *active* emotional generation practice that bypasses executive focus. It weakens the default mode network's tendency toward self-judgment and rewires the brain toward prosocial behavior, cooperation, and empathy [cite: 33, 34]. Meanwhile, Open Monitoring practices have been shown to help practitioners achieve a state of "brain criticality"—an optimal balance of neural chaos and order that allows the brain to remain highly attentive and adaptable to new information [cite: 32].

## Intensive Retreats: A Catalyst for Systemic Change

While a daily 10- to 20-minute habit provides steady cognitive maintenance, intensive, multi-day meditation retreats appear to trigger profound, systemic biological shocks to the human body that extend far beyond the brain. 

A fascinating 2026 study published in *Communications Biology* (a *Nature* portfolio journal) tracked 20 healthy adults attending a 7-day immersive mind-body retreat at the University of California San Diego [cite: 2, 19, 35]. Participants were removed from their daily stressors and engaged in approximately 33 hours of guided meditation, group healing rituals, and cognitive reframing lectures [cite: 2, 20]. 

The pre- and post-retreat diagnostics revealed transformations that were staggering in their scope. Functional MRI scans showed that the brain had shifted into a highly integrated, fluid state—resembling the neural connectivity usually only seen during clinical psychedelic experiences, but achieved entirely without drugs [cite: 19, 35]. The retreat lowered activity in regions linked to internal mental chatter and decreased whole-brain modularity, allowing different networks to communicate much more efficiently [cite: 2, 36].

### Blood Plasma and Cellular Neuroplasticity

The most surprising findings from the UCSD study did not come from brain scans, but from the participants' blood. The intensive retreat triggered a massive surge in endogenous opioids (the body's natural painkillers) and caused a complex, adaptive priming of the immune system [cite: 35, 37]. 

Most remarkably, researchers extracted post-retreat blood plasma from the participants and applied it to lab-grown human brain cells (neurons) in a petri dish. The post-retreat plasma directly caused the isolated lab neurons to grow longer dendritic branches and form new neural connections [cite: 2, 36, 37]. This provides stark evidence that intensive meditation triggers the release of circulating systemic factors—such as Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF)—that physically prime the entire central nervous system for neuroplastic growth and cellular repair [cite: 19, 36].

## Finding the Optimal Dosage: How Much is Enough?

For anyone looking to start a practice, the question of "dosage" is intensely debated. The gold-standard clinical program (MBSR) recommends 45 minutes of daily practice for eight weeks [cite: 38, 39]. However, modern reality dictates that very few working adults can sustain that level of daily commitment. 

### The Rise of App-Based Micro-Dosing

With the explosion of commercial digital platforms like Calm and Headspace, the average meditation session has dropped from 45 minutes to roughly 10 minutes [cite: 40]. Skeptics initially argued that these shortened, app-guided sessions were too brief to be biologically effective. 

However, recent meta-analyses and longitudinal trials suggest that in the realm of brain changes, consistency matters far more than duration [cite: 14, 23]. Data analyzed by researchers at Carnegie Mellon University indicates that just 10 to 21 minutes of app-based meditation, performed three times a week, is sufficient to produce measurable, statistically significant reductions in blood pressure, cortisol levels, and repetitive negative thinking [cite: 40, 41]. 

### Traditional vs. Digital Meditation 

| Feature | Smartphone App-Based Meditation | Traditional / In-Person Practice |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Typical Session Length** | 5 – 15 minutes [cite: 39, 40]. | 30 – 60+ minutes [cite: 40, 41]. |
| **Primary Advantages** | High accessibility, on-demand availability, lowered barrier to entry for beginners [cite: 40, 41]. | Interpersonal support, customized teacher guidance, highly restorative physical environments [cite: 40, 42, 43]. |
| **Mechanisms of Action** | Downregulates amygdala reactivity, reduces worry, mediates anxiety symptoms [cite: 15, 42]. | Fosters deep states of absorption (Jhana), enhances overall life satisfaction, builds social accountability [cite: 43, 44]. |
| **Main Drawbacks** | Massive attrition rate; research shows ~95% of users quit within 30 days of downloading [cite: 40]. | High barrier to entry regarding time commitment, financial cost, and geographic availability [cite: 40]. |

If traditional sitting meditation creates physical agitation or anxiety in a beginner, neuroscientists suggest that "movement-based" practices like yoga, tai chi, or walking meditation serve as excellent, scientifically valid alternatives. These modalities offer the exact same cognitive training benefits by using physical movement as the focal anchor for attention rather than the breath [cite: 13, 45].

## Hidden Risks: The "Dark Side" of Meditation

Because mindfulness is heavily marketed as a universally benign wellness tool—often equated to taking a warm bath or getting a massage—the medical community has historically underreported its potential adverse effects. 

Meditation is not simply relaxation; it is active concentration training and, frequently, a form of emotional exposure therapy [cite: 13, 46]. A comprehensive study led by psychologist Nicholas Van Dam at the University of Melbourne found that nearly 60% of meditators reported experiencing at least one adverse side effect during their practice [cite: 46]. 

Approximately 30% of practitioners found these experiences to be actively distressing. Reported side effects include panic attacks, the sudden resurfacing of traumatic memories, and feelings of dissociation or depersonalization (feeling unnervingly disconnected from one's own body or reality) [cite: 46]. 

Researchers emphasize that while meditation is overwhelmingly beneficial for the vast majority of the population, it requires proper informed consent. Individuals with active trauma, severe PTSD, or acute psychological distress should approach intensive meditation with caution. In these cases, mindfulness should ideally be explored under the guidance of a trauma-informed clinician rather than alone with a smartphone app [cite: 46, 47].

## The WEIRD Bias in Contemplative Neuroscience

As we map the future of contemplative science, researchers are confronting a massive demographic blind spot that threatens the generalizability of current findings. Up to 80% of all behavioral science and meditation research has been conducted on populations from Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic (WEIRD) societies [cite: 48, 49]. 

Meditation has its deepest roots in ancient Eastern philosophies, yet the bulk of the neuroimaging data we rely on comes from white, middle-class university students in North America and Western Europe [cite: 48, 50, 51]. This highly homogeneous sampling calls into question whether certain brain changes or emotional responses to meditation are universal human biological traits, or if they are heavily influenced by top-down Western cultural expectations and modern industrial lifestyles [cite: 49, 51]. 

To combat this WEIRD bias, international collaborations like the ENIGMA-Meditation consortium are actively aggregating brain imaging data from across the globe. By linking laboratories in Mexico, India, Norway, South Africa, and beyond, researchers aim to ensure that the neuroscience of mindfulness accurately reflects the neurodiversity of the entire global population, rather than just a narrow western demographic [cite: 50, 52].

## Therapeutic Potential Across Specific Populations

As researchers move beyond healthy college students, the application of meditation for specific clinical and vulnerable populations is showing remarkable neurobiological promise.

### Aging and Cognitive Decline
As the human brain ages, it naturally loses gray matter volume and cortical thickness, leading to cognitive decline. However, longitudinal neuroimaging studies suggest that long-term meditators experience a decelerated rate of age-related brain tissue loss [cite: 8]. The intense mental activity of meditation may stimulate synaptogenesis (the branching of new dendrites), effectively conserving gray matter and protecting against the neurotoxic effects of chronic stress hormones like cortisol on the hippocampus [cite: 4, 8].

### Schizophrenia and Psychosis
Historically, meditation was considered contraindicated for individuals with schizophrenia due to fears of exacerbating hallucinations. However, recent mixed-methods clinical trials suggest that mindfulness-based interventions can serve as a powerful adjunctive therapy [cite: 53]. By strengthening prefrontal cortical activity and improving amygdala-prefrontal connectivity, meditation helps counteract the limbic hyperactivation common in schizophrenia. Patients report that while hallucinations may not disappear, mindfulness significantly reduces the distress associated with them, improving emotional resilience and cognitive control [cite: 53].

### Incarcerated Populations
Prison environments induce chronic, severe stress that radically alters the neuropsychological profile of inmates, leading to high rates of PTSD, aggression, and mood disorders [cite: 54]. Emerging studies in correctional facilities demonstrate that interventions like Heartfulness meditation can significantly reduce the default mode network activity associated with trauma rumination. Clinical data shows measurable improvements in emotional control, state depression, and overall anger management among awaiting-trial and long-term inmates, offering a low-cost, non-pharmacological tool for neurological rehabilitation in highly stressful environments [cite: 54].

## The Frontier: Meditation Meets Neurofeedback

The future of meditation research is increasingly technological. While subjective self-reporting has limitations, scientists are now combining ancient contemplative practices with real-time neurofeedback (mbNF) using EEG and fMRI technologies [cite: 55, 56].

In these clinical setups, practitioners meditate while receiving live visual or auditory feedback about their brain states. For example, a practitioner might hear a tone that lowers in pitch specifically when they successfully downregulate their Default Mode Network or achieve specific theta-band brainwave states [cite: 55, 56]. This technology effectively removes the guesswork for beginners, allowing them to instantly verify if they are accessing the correct neural pathways. While large-scale, sham-controlled randomized trials are still needed to confirm long-term mental health outcomes, early data suggests that technologically assisted mindfulness could dramatically accelerate a practitioner's ability to achieve advanced states of emotional regulation [cite: 16, 56].

## Bottom line

Meditation definitively alters the brain, but the scientific consensus has shifted away from the idea that short-term practice physically restructures brain tissue. Instead, meditation acts as a rapid functional workout, re-wiring neural networks to improve how the brain communicates, clears metabolic waste, and regulates intense emotion—with measurable state shifts happening in a matter of minutes. While digital apps and short daily doses are highly effective for managing modern stress, practitioners should remain aware that meditation is a powerful cognitive tool that requires consistency and, in some cases, clinical guidance to navigate safely.

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74. [Healthy lifestyle systematic review](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11591838/)
75. [Epilepsy patient ecological validity](https://www.mountsinai.org/about/newsroom/2025/new-research-reveals-that-meditation-induces-changes-in-deep-brain-areas-associated-with-memory-and-emotional-regulation)
76. [Mixed-methods schizophrenia care](https://healthsciencelab.asia/archives/article/hsil20251215)
77. [Alpha suppression in experts](https://neuromeeting.ant-neuro.com/event/ant-neuromeeting-2025-berlin-63/track/exploring-brain-states-across-meditation-practices-towards-defining-markers-of-meditation-depth-105)
78. [Neural oscillations across 6 weeks](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39557128/)
79. [Differential cognitive control](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4171985/)
80. [Emotional processing in expert meditators](https://www.meditation-research.org.uk/loving-kindness-meditation-and-the-brain/)
81. [Vagal tone and default mode](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ywgjo0AkyaM)
82. [Tacit coordination and ToM](https://fse.studenttheses.ub.rug.nl/31178/1/mCCS_2023_LijnzaadGDF.pdf)
83. [Dissociable neural effects study](https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0040054)
84. [Consciousness-based health transformation](https://neurosciencenews.com/meditation-brain-immune-system-29905/)
85. [Intensive retreat Mystical Experience](https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2026/04/260406192913.htm)
86. [Self-directed longitudinal outcomes](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12336962/)
87. [Neuropsychology in prison populations](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/382708460_Effect_of_Meditation_on_Neuropsychological_Profile_of_Prisoners)
88. [LTM self-regulation outcomes](https://meditation.mgh.harvard.edu/files/Ehmann_25_NeuroImage.pdf)
89. [Non-self states and network activity](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/397815039_Attention_and_Meditative_Development_A_Review_and_Synthesis_of_Long-Term_Meditators_and_Outlook_for_The_Study_of_Advanced_Meditation)
90. [Attention in advanced meditation](https://meditation.mgh.harvard.edu/files/Ehmann_25_OSF.pdf)
91. [Thought dynamics in meditation](https://www.semanticscholar.org/paper/Meditation-and-the-Wandering-Mind%3A-A-Theoretical-of-Brandmeyer-Delorme/f67137a595473fc4f41953424775e9bbd8c75128)
92. [Time in Nigeria](https://www.google.com/search?q=time+in+Nigeria)
93. [Time in Kenya](https://www.google.com/search?q=time+in+Kenya)
94. [Time in Argentina](https://www.google.com/search?q=time+in+Argentina)
95. [Optimal duration for anxiety](https://consensus.app/search/optimal-duration-and-frequency-of-mindfulness-medi/3ZMacF8IQQOal3CPhVWBzg/)
96. [Dose-response protocol study](https://www.researchprotocols.org/2025/1/e72786)
97. [Four-arm parallel group trial](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12344385/)
98. [Minimal effective dose theories](https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/find-your-path-thriving-life/202209/how-much-should-i-meditate)
99. [Participant engagement by dose](https://www.clinrol.com/study/727)
100. [Icahn School of Medicine press release](https://www.mountsinai.org/about/newsroom/2025/new-research-reveals-that-meditation-induces-changes-in-deep-brain-areas-associated-with-memory-and-emotional-regulation)
101. [Belief-based rituals and networks](https://www.psypost.org/researchers-find-surprising-biological-changes-after-just-7-days-of-meditation-and-healing-rituals/)
102. [Inter-brain synchrony in adolescents](https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9059/12/11/2613)
103. [Dynamic functional network expression](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39834400/)
104. [Brain network science of mindfulness](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/395851755_Toward_a_Brain_Network_Science_of_Mindfulness)
105. [Pain intensity vs unpleasantness in LTMs](https://meditation.mgh.harvard.edu/files/Ehmann_25_ImagingNeuroscience.pdf)
106. [Interoceptive awareness networks](https://direct.mit.edu/imag/article/doi/10.1162/IMAG.a.82/131537/Mindfulness-cognition-and-long-term-meditators)
107. [Mindfulness neurofeedback review](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/384119208_Mindfulness-based_Neurofeedback_A_Systematic_Review_of_EEG_and_fMRI_studies)
108. [Sham-controlled RCTs necessity](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/386401370_Mindfulness-based_neurofeedback_A_systematic_review_of_EEG_and_fMRI_studies)

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37. [ucsd.edu](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE5ORk51hC-EaH8-3jbV0z8JQc5YNxiFf4Oad_Yj-E7A6HtvAhnlu7lESeKENRIi3stldYRTJNyOhxtkMjEAkW8F4xt6QArbJDR9t7IYQmHTp9MHbkro26SoHK7TtXUhQokdrXoRvL1QvwTWvVBmM_mAe55lL7VuzutS2pXy_L7sv0MOwmJBQ==)
38. [jmir.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQG7A1WpDqnA-Yl8074SluS5CfHYmZOIayCFkeRVfUuTUA-OQBQYqAAriRkGzqOdEHMxNHTZATaGNUOtguDWAZabQRzI3t5Efp8Fu-V24bWLRIG5ARwqrXfr)
39. [consensus.app](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFo4RAi4dKxGqsvjVrckxTtWBvpq9-I02yTmr12qkxfQQxnI01ldc3YHc8DmQoQ6vbaMmyVRP_E0090HdzO3JQ88bL-VIHAhNh9Hb-7T-Yfdb_zV1k4PmOw-CqYleJgVd2W1pK1CqmqBp6dyQg0I41Ld151tlzCMgjZ1qd7QHBmj9TYxxJyBGUo9Sy5Lg-r7tRUIL3VCkxeXlhBKVJz)
40. [thebrighterside.news](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQELr7zYFNz8VYWnq64qTXob6ZYSKpzB3c98jj30ZHaGQnMlBUFME00gssmh3IZ4arU2cN7wJe-lsFP8big2MDg0fsdiEbdJ50eZON-7Ar_1Isq00XwlblqWTEVLzEE6S-XFemurvXFBeZTKRZbTn3OjBsPQVLSbvJksLvlUAh8Y7P2Y_3-UQg==)
41. [cmu.edu](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH7Ot9TK5Y3-prV7xLdTrz0bP-BuRIBDjcYfwweZF2Sai-BVw6u7JM17zik9klaj4kcIkYRQwO1B7JgKe82kViET94IHT5ncSnynVr8xGkSBqWk_V-xGIhEyNzaDQoVB7yF9nDXHT201DvtPpVr-2JS-esJN23JvExJuy_Jc21yG1btVOlzv2e0wbkKG12sdxskF5PvC6YOq3_I-f1WAfcT8IzI0GSLPQ==)
42. [nih.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF-_GvH_vh3EpyoFnJXefcs8mKIy8pjc978QfEBcfc-JV1SbGlMFIAQbYAPowBYBSInfMp3pEUt2dup9DTN20cjFqFCUNAnrDbBsyiDyIWwU1Na-WSBLjQ9whLtbH3JS-a5X-b1aKYQDQ==)
43. [leidenpsychologyblog.nl](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH35kWDp3rHZRPIvZDBuTBka71_rUkx-GlEcIw6SI1Uj4pXKyoe4uZNrTqioMoMpHpxZ3LM7NiYZOMipHxSzkHlmc9V0Kdzt9al8T6m8F6sqBnHbhfS6c1Q8D5gCUqnCwXEPqPzakhL7RalBDvjb6MGPf5OznzY1KYpdhvt3XHlHZn_8VvolpStrrV8YuTB-yGQtGoxn1main_29O-9IT2ci_2BtXQm57tq0ssie775C-RrfYxD5eLh1bc=)
44. [ant-neuro.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEJ2X6W3EFOLGQVxnPxdm3acNEpuEVgELrKgKSf4cOC_jGKe_M4R4J6GuxJvgOZeAqOCX3BxlTaEH9NCfoHQ3gCEeKdkXyqO2qBmCFCgtN9jhUK1GW_ot21honOJI0GU5N6buRz5K6GtxJA-KJa_izLSlwFvNloHRXdqkAW6R9NHZJ5JXA4MMqzv6g0WMTr4hRWWLVLjsgh8e2NLm9gQ6SRkOPdkluAGh5Y9tthc6qy-PSO2Ghp9pM-2PZwwe7LpPOe-gGldXFhYFSOS2jjlC4nvzuXFCWpkbBIIrPtJWKnTGBoEh8D9l3i8A==)
45. [nih.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHIt0AMJrhEeOKVXUt09u-XPwYc0B4dwIFw2YnRlDMdFSiKj8KJiojp_6NHGLhLscIJrRIo4zsrR0Wah-proHrLp15Ujx_RVj30GtiMx47TAiZb50QgXkD3uPOnfFQw2vRJn9CSU_pysQ==)
46. [sciencedaily.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEWYA2srQ3RGHH5paygLSg413Mnr3nABWq6P5TlvVxcEO1QC6kX85TmYx9dw_ZTgxyOa-PC2UF0OqGHpNggXE7QWPhWHtMHMMd7kK8RpogVTdVDAm8jnB65yIwexxXd7fm9MUrg2ZB3MRoasYPA6h-bGyUweA==)
47. [psychologytoday.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHUQwOqj9yqYe-ILt5RG3vuBlyCPdjtAo3mBxRg_URjUVsimPge2yin2hejSTeJ_qN2VX4ZnL4pyHfpwX5XBUAUokSm0OQXBUq7AGkTY1WyYl84gSDyEYGbmc_wQ4CuGYLnBlmhZY7DohBu97JeNUPMhi5nnvrxa9SGkUH-DCxCNMYyE6ty26hwgqnVTKtj5ntK3LFolbPLghmTu34xKg==)
48. [oxsci.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE4Gqq5lVb3OK7VEgWLPRJPqSZD5r98lzaHJevBX4aZ02S7b67UnK13fmtQnpanHoDpCJzpq82iaqJ_4Hz8JTbEPJixqH7ArJYDpHCTGXIMacPl1uroETykcUdne08jtPudx6_jRMKch0b0Fq_y)
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51. [nih.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGJmAoy5RxXWFVJ2HmIbs6qgXUFc1KTnn7pMPVOa10zPgf5uIBbNJp5D4hXHOB3Kst-w87hjEz93fGnAurI-DM7GOwHUo8XKV1RZTI74osyQLcD9dRwDWyvuqghy2V-tqNFVYK_DtRw6Q==)
52. [nih.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEwFK5SAKesppTNB4Xk73BhKGczLYC7qvzJC631zuXnqWGp0G-kuG506BcxwLgqySvfkS5fehKNSnNW-oKu4h-nw0CqwoLAYoccR-YtoXJG9mFdg17x4fuDNJgXZoiq-w==)
53. [healthsciencelab.asia](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGKNZpqh8W-ld-SJk-qS5xjA-J_VGdodP3U79I8LgT1oX1C-QBlI1Y25jzOEsQTnkdzlX-Q5YycY9baVQgDyh0-IcLkeaaC-O65sYF13fheVZGBSz81uZlNARalUNWohazCQclnO_nVkRu-BvEc0CwaNg==)
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55. [researchgate.net](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF3tCCjhHdjrCKuYSNeQboK8nTkEa24wYzqXwAsILDKqhRWmWuQKtsTNSbTs2XqfhNN4ugLwGqIvGceqnwaasTE057y7rSypLoL5pBbJUroZe2pSdk1UZ2mAn7a0CDnpThuuHagep2_hfC2QgLI25SOK2z9-21kVyRW-ivGy_BAkIEwc-Rb1lnew080Mut6Q7i4uGhOiYeGE951JCzDeus6qO0GCHghFNhvr_1WhgHaegAFPsg=)
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