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Brain and Consciousness

Brain and Consciousness. Brain Patterns and TM Practice. Grey Matter White Matter. Cortex (grey matter) is 1/8 Inch Thick. Parts of neurons. Dendrites and dendritic spines Input Cell body make energy, neurotransmitters, integrate activity of cells axon Output.

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Brain and Consciousness

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  1. Brain and Consciousness Brain Patterns and TM Practice

  2. Grey MatterWhite Matter

  3. Cortex (grey matter) is 1/8 Inch Thick

  4. Parts of neurons • Dendrites and dendritic spines • Input • Cell body • make energy, neurotransmitters, integrate activity of cells • axon • Output

  5. EEG: Ions in the Fluid Around the Neuron + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + - - - - - - - Sodium and potassium - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Chloride

  6. Sources and Sinks along the Apical Dendrites + + + + + + + + Sodium and potassium + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + Chloride - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

  7. Electrical Activity from Neurons “Talking” Can be Measured at the Scalp EEG Skull Surface of the brain (1/8” thick) Brain waves measured by EEG mostly reflect electrical activity in the cortex, but include contributions from the whole brain.

  8. Power Spectrum

  9. Power Maps: Frontal Theta

  10. Task: 5 sec – 0 sec Alpha Beta Gamma

  11. TM: 30 sec – 35 sec Alpha Beta Gamma

  12. Inward and Outward Strokes of TM . Inward stroke Outward Stroke Travis, 2001

  13. Transcendental Consciousness Apneustic Breathing and Autonomic Measures Travis, 2000

  14. “Whatever the object is, if the subject keeps on changing, the knowledge will keep on changing. A fresh, alert man likes oranges, but if, when he starts to feel sleepy and dull, some says, Here is some very sweet orange juice. Would you like it? he may not even say no; he is now sinking another state of consciousness: drowsiness, sleep. The same orange juice, which was so sweet, so likeable, now has not much value and does not draw his attention at all. So knowledge differs on the basis of the differing states of consciousness of the knower.” Maharishi

  15. TM Versus Eyes-Closed Rest Travis et al, 2010

  16. fMRI (Blood Flow) during TM Red = Higher Blood Flow Blue= Lower Blood Flow

  17. Transcendental Consciousness and the Junction Point Model Transcendental Consciousness, the fourth state of consciousness experienced during Transcendental Meditation practice between thoughts, is also available between states of consciousness.

  18. Junction Point Model Travis, 1994

  19. Transcendental Consciousness and the Junction Point Junction Point in non-meditators falling asleep and during TM Travis, 1994

  20. Junction points between sleeping and dreaming Travis, 1994

  21. SrīmadBhāgavatum • Discourse XIII, 4 • “With eyes turned towards the Self, he should discover the true nature of the Self at the point of contact between deep sleep and waking life and look upon both bondage and release as illusion and not real.”

  22. Main Point The continuous firing of 100 billion neurons, each responding to different aspects of experience, create the electrical field around the brain that are sampled by EEG recording. Changes in the whole electrical field characterize conscious experience and states of consciousness from sleeping to pure consciousness.

  23. Small Group Exercise • Why might changes in brain functioning be seen primarily in the frontal areas of the brain during TM practice?

  24. A considerable body of previous research on the prefrontal cortex (PFC) has helped characterize the regional specificity of various cognitive functions, such as cognitive control and decision making. Here we provide definitive findings on this topic, using a neuropsychological approach that takes advantage of a unique dataset accrued over several decades. We applied voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping in 344 individuals with focal lesions (165 involving the PFC) who had been tested on a comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tasks. Two distinct functional-anatomical networks were revealed within the PFC: one associated with cognitive control (response inhibition, conflict monitoring, and switching), which included the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and anterior cingulate cortex and a second associated with value-based decision-making, which included the orbitofrontal, ventromedial, and frontopolar cortex. Furthermore, cognitive control tasks shared a common performance factor related to set shifting that was linked to the rostral anterior cingulate cortex. By contrast, regions in the ventral PFC were required for decision-making. These findings provide detailed causal evidence for a remarkable functional-anatomical specificity in the human PFC.

  25. Prism analogy Decomposing a complex signal into component waves.

  26. Delta 0-4 Hz Theta 4-8 Hz FFT Raw FFT Alpha 8-12 Hz FFT FFT FFT Beta 12-20 Hz Gamma 20-50 Hz

  27. Power = Amplitude squared Alpha amplitude Beta amplitude

  28. Default Network: Frontal-Midline circuits(eLORETA-exact Low Resolution Electrotomography) Travis et al, 2010

  29. Make into transnecnding… Action Thinking Motor CEO Emotions Concrete Experience

  30. Anterior-Posterior Alpha Synchrony Hebert et al, 2005. Journal of Signal Processing.

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