While studies have highlighted that yoga and meditation can bring structural changes responsible for calming emotions, better memory and lower stress, the focus is now on “mindfulness meditation”.
Doctors from the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (NIMHANS), who have been working on the effects of yoga and meditation on the brain for over three decades, are set to focus on the Buddhist traditions of meditation.
The yoga team from the premier institution is not only seeking the guidance of the Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism, but also collaborating with the Garden of Samadhi Centre, a city-based voluntary organisation which aims to integrate scientific understanding of mind with traditional contemplative practises.
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B.N. Gangadhar, programme director, Advanced Centre of Yoga at NIMHANS, told
The Advanced Centre for Yoga in NIMHANS is using yoga and it applications to help mind-related conditions (psychiatric disorders like depression and schizophrenia) and neurological disorders such as epilepsy. “We are comparing the therapeutic effects of yoga with conventional drugs. In our investigations, there is a high degree of evidence that yoga does have a significant therapeutic effect in conditions like depression, memory loss, and so on,” Dr. Gangadhar said.