Futurity

Short meditation boosts how students do on simple tasks

Students who listened to just a few minutes of a meditation tape performed better on cognitive tasks afterward, but there was one exception.

College students who listen to a 10-minute meditation tape complete simple cognitive tasks more quickly and accurately than peers who listen to a “control” recording on a generic subject, according to a new study.

“…you don’t have to spend weeks practicing to see improvement…”

The study shows that the benefits of a short meditation practice even extend to people who have never meditated before.

“We have known for awhile that people who practice meditation for a few weeks or months tend to perform better on cognitive tests, but now we know you don’t have to spend weeks practicing to see improvement,” says Hedy Kober, associate professor of psychiatry and psychology at Yale University and senior author of the paper, which appears in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience.

Researchers randomly divided college students into two groups. One group listened to a 10-minute recording on meditation prior to performing cognitive tests and the second group listened to a similarly produced tape about sequoia trees.

Researchers gave both groups simple tasks designed to measure cognitive dexterity. Those who listened to the meditation recording performed significantly better, across two studies.

There was one exception, however. Those who scored highest in measurements of neuroticism—”I worry all the time”—did not benefit from listening to the meditation tape.

“We don’t know if longer meditation sessions, or multiple sessions, would improve their cognitive scores, and we look forward to testing that in future studies,” Kober says.

Source: Yale University

The post Short meditation boosts how students do on simple tasks appeared first on Futurity.

More from Futurity

Futurity3 min read
Brain Discovery Sheds Light On Addiction
New research sheds light on neural processing of diverse classes of rewards in mice, with potential implications for understanding substance use disorders in humans. Drugs like morphine and cocaine fundamentally warp the brain’s reward system—creatin
Futurity3 min read
Young Heavy Drinkers Cut Alcohol Use During Pandemic
A new study finds heavy-drinking young adults decreased alcohol intake during the pandemic. The researchers found alcohol use and alcohol-related problems substantially decreased in heavy-drinking young adults during the pandemic, and these decreases
Futurity2 min readRobotics
Stretchy ‘Skin’ Could Give Robots Sensitivity Of Human Touch
A first-ever stretchy electronic skin could equip robots and other devices with the same softness and touch sensitivity as human skin, researchers report. The e-skin opens up new possibilities to perform tasks that require a great deal of precision a

Related Books & Audiobooks