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To: T L Comiskey who wrote (19543)5/24/2003 5:36:49 PM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 89467
 
Meditation Shown to Light Up Brains of Buddhists
Wed May 21, 2:48 PM ET

LONDON (Reuters) - Buddhists really are happy, calm and serene people
-- at least according to their brain scans.

Using new scanning techniques, neuroscientists
have discovered that certain areas of the brain
light up constantly in Buddhists, which indicates
positive emotions and good mood. This happens
at times even when they are not meditating.

"We can now hypothesize with some confidence
that those apparently happy, calm Buddhist
souls one regularly comes across in places such
as Dharamsala, India, really are happy,"
Professor Owen Flanagan, of Duke University in
North Carolina, said Wednesday.

Dharamsala is the home base of exiled Tibetan leader the Dalai Lama.

The scanning studies by scientists at the University of Wisconsin at
Madison showed activity in the left prefrontal lobes of experienced Buddhist
practitioners. The area is linked to positive emotions, self-control and
temperament.

Other research by Paul Ekman, of the University of California San Francisco
Medical Center, suggests that meditation and mindfulness can tame the
amygdala, an area of the brain which is the hub of fear memory.

Ekman discovered that experienced Buddhists were less likely to be
shocked, flustered, surprised or as angry as other people.

Flanagan believes that if the findings of the studies can be confirmed they
could be of major importance.

"The most reasonable hypothesis is that there is something about
conscientious Buddhist practice that results in the kind of happiness we all
seek," Flanagan said in a report in New Scientist magazine.