Meditation Defined

Series: Neural Performance Series | December 2025

Meditation is deliberate mental training that, when practiced consistently, leads to measurable structural changes in the brain—specifically in the Default Mode Network (DMN), prefrontal cortex, and amygdala. It is the practice of doing one thing while noticing when you're doing something else, and redirecting.

What does meditation do to the brain?

Judson Brewer, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist at Brown University, used real-time brain imaging to show that experienced meditators have significantly reduced activity in the Posterior Cingulate Cortex (PCC)—a hub of the DMN. The PCC is where "I, me, mine" thinking lives. When it quiets, so does the mental noise.

What's more interesting: Gamma wave activity, typically associated with "flow states" and high-level cognitive processing, increases during meditation. Gamma waves are the fastest brainwave frequency and are correlated with peak mental performance, insight, and information synthesis.

Neuroscientist Richard Davidson at the University of Wisconsin found that long-term meditators have 25x more gamma activity than non-meditators, even at rest. Their brains were rewired—not just during practice, but as a new baseline.

Which meditation techniques work?

There is no "best" meditation. The right one depends on your goals. Here are the main traditions, stripped of branding:

Metta (Loving-Kindness)
Buddhist

Focus on generating feelings of warmth and goodwill toward yourself and others. Research shows it activates the insula and anterior cingulate cortex, increasing empathy and emotional regulation.

Vipassana (Insight)
Buddhist

Observe sensations without reaction. The goal is to see the impermanent nature of all experience. This builds equanimity—the ability to witness discomfort without catastrophizing.

Zazen (Just Sitting)
Zen

No focus on breath or mantra—just sit with open awareness. It is considered the most "advanced" practice because there's nothing to hold onto. Ruthless in its simplicity.

The best technique is the one you'll actually do. If you're starting out, begin with mindfulness or simple breath awareness. The key is consistency—daily practice for 10-20 minutes changes structure faster than occasional long sessions.

Why the Breath Matters

Most meditation techniques return to the breath for a reason. It's always available, it's neutral, and—crucially—it bridges the voluntary and autonomic nervous systems. When you focus on breathing, you're indirectly influencing your heart rate variability, stress hormones, and nervous system state.

For a deeper dive into the neuroscience of breath, see our Breathwork Guide.

Key Relationships (Semantic Triplets)

Entity (A) Relationship Outcome (B)
Meditation Decreases DMN Activity
Meditation Increases Gamma Waves
PCC Quieting Reduces Self-Referential Rumination
Metta Practice Activates Insula (Empathy)

The Yoga Connection: Dhyana

In the yoga tradition, meditation is called Dhyana—the seventh limb of Patanjali's eight-limbed path. It follows Dharana (concentration) and precedes Samadhi (absorption). The progression is logical: you must first be able to hold attention before attention can dissolve into its object.

Modern meditation is often taught in isolation, but in classical yoga, it's the culmination of physical postures (asana), breath control (pranayama), and sense withdrawal (pratyahara). The body is prepared so the mind can sit.

Ready to Start Meditating?

Find yoga studios that offer guided meditation, mindfulness classes, and contemplative practice.

References

Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Meditation is generally safe, but if you have a history of trauma, psychosis, or severe anxiety, work with a qualified teacher or mental health professional.