- Apr
- 22
- 2020
Mapping the Meditative Mind: Neural Mechanisms and Clinical Relevance
Mindfulness is rapidly being integrated into current psychological treatment protocols as a method of systematic training to stabilize attention, improve self-awareness, and reduce perseverative forms of emotional reactivity; however, clinical protocols remain diverse in their implementation and neurobiological mechanisms by which mindfulness functions in select populations are currently unclear. This presentation will contextualize mindfulness across clinical and scientific contexts. The psychological and cognitive processes as well as the underlying neurobiology supporting existing mindfulness-based meditation practices will be examined in detail for both novice and expert practitioners. A systems-based model of mindfulness will be presented describing a core set of skill-based meditative practices that function to improve self-awareness, self-regulation, and self-transcendence. Findings from the extant literature and the Contemplative Neuroscience and Integrative Medicine (CNIM) lab will be integrated into this model…
About Speaker
David Vago, Ph.D. is director of the Contemplative Neuroscience and Integrative Medicine Laboratory in the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at Vanderbilt University. He is associate professor in the departments of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation and Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
He is core faculty at the Vanderbilt Brain Institute and Institute for Infection, Immunology, and Inflammation. He also maintains an appointment as a research associate in the Functional Neuroimaging Laboratory (FNL), Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), Harvard Medical School.