ArticlesReader.com Menu
Newest Articles
Most Viewed Articles
ArticlesReader.com RSS
Submit Article
Login
Signup
Search the articles

Articles Main Categories
Advice
Animals
Automobiles
Business
Career
Communications
Computer Programming
Computers
Entertainment
Environment
Family
Fashion
Finance
Food
Health & Medical
Home & Garden
Humor
Internet Business
Internet Marketing
Legal
Leisure & Recreation
Marketing
Other
Politics
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Sports
Technology & Science
Travel
Writing
Subscribe
Receive alert message from us when new articles submitted to our site for free.

Enter your name

Enter your email

Syndicate

















Related Products
Home::Technology & Science

CHANGES IN PERCEPTION FOLLOWING YOGA PRACTICE

Author : Manoj Dash,BHMS,DYT,Ph.D.
Perception is sensation with added complexity due to factors such as memories and emotions. Yoga practice influences perception in three ways: (1) by increasing perceptual sensitivity, (2) by selectively `shutting out’ undesirable stimuli, and (3) by changing distorted perception, which occurs in schizophrenia. Practicing yoga improved auditory and visual perception, by increasing sensitivity to various characteristics of the stimuli (e.g., intensity, frequency). Also, electrophysiological studies using evoked potentials have shown that during yoga practice the transmission of sensory information is facilitated. These studies suggest several applications of yoga practice, in activities ranging from aviation to art. Interestingly, other studies suggest that yoga practice can also help to `shut off’ undesirable external stimuli, which is possibly due to cortical feedback connections to the sensory pathway. It is also possible that through changes in cognitive factors yoga influences perception, so that even though the stimulus is `sensed’ it is not disturbing. This concept has been studied using yoga to help persons with chronic pain to willfully ignore it. Finally, preliminary studies have shown that yoga practice may modify distorted perception in conditions such as schizophrenia. Hence, there is sufficient research to support the idea that yoga practice influences perception in different ways, with varied applications.

Perception is the process of interpretation, organization, and elaborating the `raw materials’ of sensation (1). Sensation involves sensory receptors and pathways, whereas perception is a cognitive process. The actual perception of a sensation depends on factors such as what has been learned, memories, and emotions. It is also important to remember that while perception usually refers to sensory stimuli, this definition can be extended to include the perception of situations.
Recordings of middle latency auditory evoked potentials (AEP-MLRs) have shown that the practice of ujjayi pranayama modifies the AEP-MLRs components in two ways. A specific component (the Na wave) has reduced latency and increased amplitude during pranayama practice (2). These results suggest that this practice facilitates the processing of auditory information at mesencephalic and diencephalic levels. A similar result was also seen during the practice of meditation on the syllable Om (3), where subjects who had more than ten years of meditation experience, showed an increase in the Na wave amplitude and a decrease in its’ latency while mentally repeating (Om). No such effect was seen when the same subjects mentally repeated `one’, during a control session, for comparison.
These electrophysiological data are corroborated by neuropsychological studies. Previous studies on meditation have shown significant changes in perception, attention and cognition (4). Brown and Engler in 1980 (5), reported that meditators were found to be more sensitive to subtle aspects of color and shading of the Rorschach test inkblots, than they had been before meditation. Two studies on the Critical Flicker Fusion Frequency have shown that perceptual sensitivity is not restricted to subtle aspects of the stimulus alone, as detection of a high frequency flickering stimulus was found to improve following yoga training (6,7). A study on the degree of a visual geometric illusion, based on Müller-Lyer lines showed that a combination of focusing and defocusing yoga visual exercises reduces optical illusion more than focusing alone (8). These studies were conducted on adult subjects with varying durations of yoga training. It was reported in a recent study on Critical Flicker Fusion Frequency and optical illusion on children who practiced yoga for a shorter duration of 10 days that there was also a significant improvement following the practice of yoga (9). To perceive an optical illusion with minimal error and for accurate depth perception the spatial component of visual perception is necessary (10). The decrease in the degree of optical illusion perceived over a short period would be mainly due to cognitive judgmental factors, but not retinal or cortical factors as generally understood (11). The cognitive judgmental factors involve the way in which the subject interprets incoming visual information based on experience, hypothesis and strategies of judgment. Hence the training through yoga to focus and defocus might have influenced the cognitive judgmental factors of the subjects, to significantly reduce the degree of optical illusion perceived. Critical flicker fusion frequency (CFF), on the other hand, assesses the temporal component of perception of a visual stimulus (12). The increase in CFF following yoga could be attributed to the effects of yoga reducing physiological signs of stress, as CFF was found to be lower during specific stressors, such as food and water deprivation (13). This showed that both spatial and temporal components of visual perception are modified following yoga practices.
Hence the electrophysiological data as well as the visual, neuropsychological studies cited above have shown that yoga practice improves diverse aspects of auditory and visual stimuli in normal volunteers.
An interesting difference in auditory perception (based on AEP-MLRs) were also seen in congenitally blind children (14) and adults (15) compared to those with normal sight. The changes suggested improved auditory perception which could be a compensatory mechanism of auditory sensation in the presence of poor vision.
The effect of yoga has been observed on the perception of situations. Examples of a change in the way persons perceive situations was observed in two separate groups of subjects. A study on 69 aged persons (above 60 years of age), staying in an old age home, showed that after 6 months of yoga practice there was a reduction in their feelings of depression, based on the Geriatric Depression Scale suggesting a favorable change in the wy they perceived their circumstances (16). Another study on ten patients with breast cancer (stage 2 and 3), showed reduction in depression and anxiety (using Beck’s Depression Scale, Spielberger’s State and Trait Anxiety Inventory), after practicing yoga for 6 months. Hence yoga can probably have positive effects on both sensory perception and on the way situations or circumstances are perceived (17).
Finally, there may be more ways of perceiving the world than we know about. As the renowned sensory neurophysiologist, Vernon B. Mountacastle said: “Each of us lives within…..the prison of his own brain. Projecting from it are millions of fragile sensory nerve fibers, in groups uniquely adapted to sample the energetic states of the world around us: heat, light, force, and chemical composition. That is all we ever know of it directly; all else is logical inference” (18). Yoga may allow an advanced practitioner to develop `siddhis’ or special powers, which may hence allow such a person to have a different, possibly `expanded’ perception of the world.

About the Author

I am a Doctor, doing my Ph.D.in Yoga. My topic of interest is to conduct Yoga Retreat, take class for Yoga Teacher and Medical professionals for in depth Research findings, and also Interest to conduct research in various field of yoga, both experimental and theoretical. I have been Traveling to all EUROPIAN countries.
My contact: yoga4all@india.com
My web page:
http://www.geocities.com/manojrieneke/Research.html

Spam emails More free articles

Related articles


  1. Lighter Than Air Tubular Flight
  2. Tunneling Concepts for Advanced Warfare
  3. Laser Attack, EA, Scalar Attack on Composite Manufactured Vehicles
  4. How to Build a Mechanical Bullet Which Turns
  5. Shamans and Their Documented Abilities
  6. Weather Control and Creation to Use as a Screen for Troop Advancement
  7. Building a Single Unit CO2 Laser Grid
  8. Military Convoy Artificial Tubes for Safe Travel
  9. Organic Decoy Devices for Warfare (ODDW)
  10. Down Scrolling Text to Find Patterns
  11. Human Motion, Walking, Running and Gait for Identification
  12. Aluminum Oxide to Disrupt Laser Weapons
  13. Preventing Death in a Bio Threat
  14. Re-Designing the ICBM With The Latest and Greatest Technology
  15. Bio-Rhythm Disruption Frequency Identifier for Human Intentions
  16. 747 Onboard Laser Might Cause Mistake and Identity
  17. Active Aerial Minefields
  18. Free Energy from Space
  19. Micro Blimps Cleaning the Air in Buildings to Eliminate Anthrax spores
  20. Surround Panoramic Night Vision is Possible
  21. Confusing MAV Optic Flow Sensors In flight Using Mobiles
  22. MAV Propulsion and Testing
  23. UAV - Terrain Following Technologies
  24. MAVs, UAVs, and Insect Flight Characteristics
  25. Para Trooper Gliders With Angle of Attack Motor or Crank
More related feeds
CHANGES IN PERCEPTION FOLLOWING YOGA PRACTICE
Perception is sensation with added complexity due to factors such as memories and emotions. Yoga practice influences perception in three ways: (1) by increasing perceptual sensitivity, (2) by selectively `shutting out' undesirable ...

A BRIEF ATTEMPT AT A SPIRITUAL AUTOBIOGRAPHY (III)
Several months later I obtained a book called Yoga Self Taught. I began practicing some of the exercises within. I noticed that doing some of the introductory poses suggested in the book made my body feel much stronger and more ...

Change your lifestyle and live longer!
While a regular meditation practice provides you to reduce stress, sharpen your perception, and gives you power to enhance your creative expression, practising pranayama reduces stress, induces a peaceful state of mind, and improves ...

Teaching Hatha Yoga - What Do Hatha Yoga Students Want?
With said, beginner students with little knowledge about yoga, they have the perception of the Entering an exercise. Their reasons for coming to a yoga class vary considerably. The main reasons for the beginning yoga practice: Weight ...

The Perfection of Yoga for everyone
Naturally, everyone will start Yoga practice in terms of their acquired temperament. Those with an active nature will do something with their body to achieve the goal. That approach in all its forms is called Karma Yoga, the Yoga of ...

TO CHANGE THE FORM Of THINGS START WITH THE MIND
In Kundalini Yoga practice the job of the teacher, according to Yogi Bhajan, is to provide the tools for the student to feel elevated, by allowing their perception to become stronger. These tools are both physical and mental, ...

As a yoga teacher,I always come across a question from my beginner ...
Yoga will not only beneficial to your physical body but also mentally.A good practice will give you a feeling of the unity of the mind and body through out the flowing from asanas(pose) to asanas in a yoga practice while a 'not so good' ...

PHED - TUTR Courses From Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College
PHED 1122 YOGA II. 1 hour. Prerequisite: PHED 1121 with a grade of C or better. A continuation of Yoga I with the addition of more challenging asanas (poses), pranayama (breathing), meditation and relaxation techniques and more indepth ...

Off the Mat — Sadhana
So as my perception of what is possible starts to shift, so too does my sadhana — my spiritual practice — start to change. I go from sweating happily on a yoga mat to discovering unexpected spiritual aspects to the practice to becoming ...

Recognized Yoga Education Facilities and Employment Opportunities ...
Regular Yoga practice will help anyone sleep better. Steady Yoga practice brings about many positive lifestyle changes. The physical forms of Yoga contain low impact exercises, which heal the body and mind. ...

 


 

© 2007 articlesreader.com - All Rights Reserved