1 00:00:11,972 --> 00:00:13,091 Good morning. 2 00:00:13,091 --> 00:00:15,603 So when I was in graduate school, I was a runner, 3 00:00:15,603 --> 00:00:18,486 and a friend and I decided that we're going to run the Boston Marathon. 4 00:00:18,486 --> 00:00:20,999 And so we started training and we overtrained, 5 00:00:20,999 --> 00:00:22,990 and I developed knee and back problems. 6 00:00:22,990 --> 00:00:24,901 So I went to see a physical therapist, 7 00:00:24,901 --> 00:00:26,569 and they told me that I had to stop running 8 00:00:26,569 --> 00:00:28,441 and instead I should just stretch. 9 00:00:28,441 --> 00:00:31,956 As I was leaving the phzsical therapist office, 10 00:00:31,956 --> 00:00:35,410 I saw an ad for a vigorous yoga class 11 00:00:35,410 --> 00:00:38,086 that promised not only to promote flexibility, 12 00:00:38,086 --> 00:00:41,793 but also to promote strength and cardiorespiratory fitness. 13 00:00:41,793 --> 00:00:44,205 So I thought, oh, well, this is a great way 14 00:00:44,205 --> 00:00:47,320 that I can stretch, but also remain in shape, 15 00:00:47,320 --> 00:00:49,892 and maybe I could even still run the Boston Marathon. 16 00:00:49,892 --> 00:00:54,177 So I went to the yoga class and I really enjoyed it, 17 00:00:54,177 --> 00:00:57,843 except when the teacher would make all sorts of claims, 18 00:00:57,843 --> 00:01:01,493 you know, all sorts of medical claims, but also claims about, oh, yes, 19 00:01:01,493 --> 00:01:03,074 it will help you... 20 00:01:03,074 --> 00:01:06,045 You'll increase your compassion and open your heart and I was just like... 21 00:01:06,045 --> 00:01:08,574 I remember my eyes would roll and... 22 00:01:08,574 --> 00:01:11,770 I think, yeah, yeah, yeah, I am here to stretch. 23 00:01:11,770 --> 00:01:14,489 (Laughter) 24 00:01:14,827 --> 00:01:16,642 But what was interesting was that after a couple of weeks 25 00:01:16,642 --> 00:01:18,460 I started noticing some of these changes, 26 00:01:18,460 --> 00:01:21,850 I started noticing that I was calmer and I was better able 27 00:01:21,850 --> 00:01:26,488 to handle difficult situations, and indeed, I was feeling more compassionate 28 00:01:26,488 --> 00:01:28,101 and open-hearted towards other people, 29 00:01:28,101 --> 00:01:30,540 and I was better able to see things from other people's point of view. 30 00:01:30,540 --> 00:01:34,178 And, you know, I was like, hm, how could this be, 31 00:01:34,178 --> 00:01:35,789 how could this be? 32 00:01:35,789 --> 00:01:39,776 And, I thought, well maybe, you know, it's just a placebo response, right? 33 00:01:39,776 --> 00:01:42,304 She told me I will feel this, so maybe that's why I was feeling it. 34 00:01:42,304 --> 00:01:46,111 So I decided to do a literature search to see if there's any research on this. 35 00:01:46,111 --> 00:01:48,792 And low and behold, there was quite a bit 36 00:01:48,792 --> 00:01:55,479 showing both yoga and meditation are extremely effective for decreasing stress 37 00:01:55,479 --> 00:01:58,621 they're also very good for reducing symptoms associated with numerous diseases 38 00:01:58,621 --> 00:02:02,274 including depression, anxiety, pain, and insomnia. 39 00:02:02,274 --> 00:02:06,763 And there's a couple of very good studies demonstrating it can actually 40 00:02:06,763 --> 00:02:10,860 improve your ability to pay attention, and most interestingly, I thought 41 00:02:10,860 --> 00:02:13,683 virtually every study has shown that people are just happier. 42 00:02:13,683 --> 00:02:17,214 They report they're more satisfied with their life, and they have a higher quality of life. 43 00:02:17,214 --> 00:02:20,276 And so, this was interesting to me. 44 00:02:20,276 --> 00:02:24,657 And so I decided to switch and start doing this sort of research. 45 00:02:25,334 --> 00:02:28,279 So as a nurse scientists, you know, how could this be happening? 46 00:02:28,279 --> 00:02:31,656 How can something as silly as a yoga posture 47 00:02:31,656 --> 00:02:33,099 or sitting and watching your breath. 48 00:02:33,099 --> 00:02:36,743 How can that lead to all these sorts of different types of changes? 49 00:02:36,743 --> 00:02:42,261 So, what we know is that whenever you engage in a behavior over and over again, 50 00:02:42,261 --> 00:02:44,928 that this can lead to changes in your brain. 51 00:02:44,928 --> 00:02:47,274 And this is what's referred to as neuroplasticity. 52 00:02:47,274 --> 00:02:51,036 And what this just means is that your brain is plastic and that 53 00:02:51,036 --> 00:02:55,330 the neurons can change how they talk to each other with experience. 54 00:02:55,330 --> 00:03:00,134 And so, there's a couple of studies demonstrating 55 00:03:00,134 --> 00:03:02,880 that you can actually detect this, using machines like the MRI machine. 56 00:03:02,880 --> 00:03:04,565 The first study was with juggling. 57 00:03:04,565 --> 00:03:06,916 They took people who had never ever juggled before, 58 00:03:06,916 --> 00:03:09,400 and they scanned them, and then they taught them how to juggle, 59 00:03:09,400 --> 00:03:11,515 and they said, "Keep practising for three months." 60 00:03:11,515 --> 00:03:14,617 And they brought them back after three months, and they scanned them the second time, 61 00:03:14,617 --> 00:03:17,749 and they found that they can actually detect with the MRI machine 62 00:03:17,749 --> 00:03:20,383 changes in the amount of grey matter in the brain of these people 63 00:03:20,383 --> 00:03:22,847 in areas that are important for detecting visual motion. 64 00:03:22,847 --> 00:03:27,635 So, I thought, OK, three months, you know... 65 00:03:27,635 --> 00:03:32,570 Can meditation change brain structure too? 66 00:03:32,570 --> 00:03:36,329 Something as simple as, you know, as juggling. 67 00:03:36,329 --> 00:03:37,481 What about meditation? 68 00:03:37,481 --> 00:03:39,314 So the first study we did, 69 00:03:39,314 --> 00:03:41,650 we recruited a bunch of people from the Boston area, 70 00:03:41,650 --> 00:03:44,029 and these were not monks or meditation teachers, 71 00:03:44,029 --> 00:03:46,235 they're just average Joes who on average practice meditation 72 00:03:46,235 --> 00:03:47,706 about 30-40 minutes a day, 73 00:03:47,706 --> 00:03:49,568 and we put them in a scanner, 74 00:03:49,568 --> 00:03:51,755 and we compared them to a group of people who were demographically matched, 75 00:03:51,755 --> 00:03:53,500 but who don't meditate. 76 00:03:53,500 --> 00:03:56,089 And what we found is this: 77 00:03:56,089 --> 00:03:58,209 That there were indeed several regions of the brain 78 00:03:58,209 --> 00:04:01,757 that had more grey matter in the meditators compared to the controls. 79 00:04:01,757 --> 00:04:04,755 One of the regions I'm going to point out to you 80 00:04:04,755 --> 00:04:07,122 is here in the front of the brain, it's the area that's important 81 00:04:07,122 --> 00:04:09,331 for working memory and executive decision making 82 00:04:09,331 --> 00:04:11,480 and what was interesting about it 83 00:04:11,480 --> 00:04:14,010 was when we actually plotted the data versus their ages. 84 00:04:14,010 --> 00:04:17,716 So here in the red square, that's the controls. 85 00:04:17,716 --> 00:04:19,647 And this is something you see actually, 86 00:04:19,647 --> 00:04:21,646 it's been well documented that as we get older, 87 00:04:21,646 --> 00:04:24,379 not just there, but across most of our cortex, 88 00:04:24,379 --> 00:04:26,478 it actually shrinks as we get older. 89 00:04:26,478 --> 00:04:28,496 And this is part of the reason why as we get older, 90 00:04:28,496 --> 00:04:34,745 it's harder to figure things out and to remember things. 91 00:04:34,745 --> 00:04:37,273 And what was interesting was that in this one region, 92 00:04:37,273 --> 00:04:41,647 the 50 year old meditators had the same amount of cortex as the 25 year olds, 93 00:04:41,647 --> 00:04:45,577 suggesting that meditation practice may actually slow down or prevent 94 00:04:45,577 --> 00:04:51,093 the natural age-related decline in cortical structure. 95 00:04:51,093 --> 00:04:53,450 So now, the critics, and there were many critics, 96 00:04:53,450 --> 00:04:57,365 said, well, you know, meditators, they're weird. 97 00:04:57,365 --> 00:05:00,193 Maybe they were just like that before they started practising, right? 98 00:05:00,193 --> 00:05:02,867 A lot of them were vegetarian, so maybe it had something to do with their diet, 99 00:05:02,867 --> 00:05:04,788 or something else with their lifestyle, you know. 100 00:05:04,788 --> 00:05:07,419 Couldn't possible be the meditation, it's something else, right? 101 00:05:07,419 --> 00:05:11,661 And to be fair, you know, that could be true. 102 00:05:11,661 --> 00:05:14,382 This first study could not address that. 103 00:05:14,382 --> 00:05:16,895 So we did a second study. 104 00:05:18,219 --> 00:05:21,047 In this study, what we did is, we took people who had never meditated before, 105 00:05:21,047 --> 00:05:24,995 and we put them in the scanner, and then we put them through 106 00:05:24,995 --> 00:05:27,611 an eight-week meditation-based stress reduction program 107 00:05:27,611 --> 00:05:30,700 where they were told to meditate every day for 30 to 40 minutes. 108 00:05:30,700 --> 00:05:33,267 And then we scanned them again at the end of the eight weeks, 109 00:05:33,267 --> 00:05:35,086 and this is what we found. 110 00:05:35,086 --> 00:05:39,700 So what you see is that several areas became larger. 111 00:05:39,700 --> 00:05:42,330 In this slide we can see the hippocampus, 112 00:05:42,330 --> 00:05:47,354 and in the graph, the controls are in blue and the meditation subjects 113 00:05:47,354 --> 00:05:50,368 are in red, and what we see is that the hippocampus, 114 00:05:50,368 --> 00:05:52,734 this is the area that's important for learning and memory, 115 00:05:52,734 --> 00:05:57,700 it's also important for emotion regulation and it was interesting it was less 116 00:05:57,700 --> 00:06:00,516 grey matter in this region in people who had depression and PTSD. 117 00:06:00,516 --> 00:06:04,984 Another region we identified was the temporo-parietal junction 118 00:06:04,984 --> 00:06:06,683 which is here above your ear, 119 00:06:06,683 --> 00:06:10,552 it's important for perspective taking and empathy and compassion. 120 00:06:10,552 --> 00:06:14,085 And again, these are both functions which people report changing when 121 00:06:14,085 --> 00:06:17,888 they start practising meditation and yoga. 122 00:06:17,888 --> 00:06:20,737 Another region we identified was the amygdala. 123 00:06:20,737 --> 00:06:23,189 And the amygdala is the fight-or-flight part of your brain. 124 00:06:23,189 --> 00:06:26,071 And here we actually found a decrease in gray matter. 125 00:06:26,071 --> 00:06:28,671 And what was interesting was that the change in grey matter 126 00:06:28,671 --> 00:06:30,463 was correlated with the change in stress. 127 00:06:30,463 --> 00:06:32,503 So the more stress reduction people reported, 128 00:06:32,503 --> 00:06:35,706 the smaller the amygdala became. 129 00:06:36,337 --> 00:06:40,575 And this was really interesting, because it's sort of opposite and parallel 130 00:06:40,575 --> 00:06:43,173 of what some animal studies have shown. 131 00:06:43,173 --> 00:06:46,349 So colleagues using rodents, 132 00:06:46,349 --> 00:06:49,943 they took rodents who were just happy, normal rodents, 133 00:06:49,943 --> 00:06:52,133 and they had them in their cage, and they measured 134 00:06:52,133 --> 00:06:55,218 their amygdala, and then they put them through a ten- day stress regimen. 135 00:06:55,218 --> 00:06:58,204 And at the end of the ten days, they measured their amygdala, 136 00:06:58,204 --> 00:07:02,057 and this exact same analogous part of the rat brain grew. 137 00:07:02,057 --> 00:07:06,484 So we found a decrease with stress, they found an increase with stress. 138 00:07:06,484 --> 00:07:10,017 What was interesting was that then they left the animals alone, 139 00:07:10,017 --> 00:07:12,887 and three weeks later they went back and tested them again. 140 00:07:12,887 --> 00:07:16,087 And three weeks later, that same part of the amygdala was still large, 141 00:07:16,087 --> 00:07:19,104 and the animals, even though they were in their original cages 142 00:07:19,104 --> 00:07:22,355 where they were happy, were still acting stressed out, 143 00:07:22,355 --> 00:07:25,105 so they, you know, they were cowering in the corner, 144 00:07:25,105 --> 00:07:28,120 and they just weren't exploring the space the way they had before. 145 00:07:28,120 --> 00:07:32,525 And so, this is the exact opposite of what we saw at the humans, 146 00:07:32,525 --> 00:07:35,578 because with the humans nothing has changed with their environment. 147 00:07:35,578 --> 00:07:37,754 They still had their stressful jobs, 148 00:07:37,754 --> 00:07:40,076 all the difficult problems were still being difficult, 149 00:07:40,076 --> 00:07:41,792 and the economy still sucked, 150 00:07:41,792 --> 00:07:47,108 but yeah, their amygdala got smaller, and they were reporting less stress. 151 00:07:47,108 --> 00:07:50,322 And so, together these really show that the change in the amygdala 152 00:07:50,322 --> 00:07:54,191 is not responding to the change in the environment, but rather it's representing 153 00:07:54,191 --> 00:07:59,837 the change in the people's reaction or relationship to their environment. 154 00:08:01,945 --> 00:08:05,403 And then the other thing that the study shows is that, 155 00:08:05,850 --> 00:08:09,650 it wasn't just the people were saying, "Oh, I feel better." 156 00:08:09,650 --> 00:08:13,643 Or that it was a placebo response, or that they're trying to please us, 157 00:08:13,643 --> 00:08:16,790 but there was actually a neurobiological reason why they're saying they 158 00:08:16,790 --> 00:08:18,908 felt less stressed. 159 00:08:18,908 --> 00:08:21,788 And so the idea that I'd like to share with all of you today is that meditation 160 00:08:21,788 --> 00:08:23,120 can literally change your brain. 161 00:08:23,120 --> 00:08:24,606 Thank you. 162 00:08:24,606 --> 00:08:26,249 (Applause)