Studies have shown that meditation has both short-term and long-term effects on various perceptual faculties.
In 1984, Brown et al. conducted a study that measured the
absolute threshold of perception for light stimulus duration in
practitioners and non-practitioners of mindfulness meditation. The
results showed that meditators have a significantly lower detection
threshold for light stimuli of short duration.
In 2000, Tloczynski et al. studied the perception of visual illusions (the Müller-Lyer Illusion and the Poggendorff Illusion)
by zen masters, novice meditators, and non-meditators. There were no
statistically significant effects found for the Müller-Lyer illusion,
however, there were for the Poggendorff. The zen masters experienced a
statistically significant reduction in initial illusion (measured as
error in millimeters) and a lower decrement in illusion for subsequent
trials.
The theory of mechanism behind the changes in perception that accompany mindfulness meditation is described thus by Tloczynski:
“A person who meditates consequently perceives objects more as directly experienced stimuli and less as concepts… With the removal or minimization of cognitive stimuli and generally increasing awareness, meditation can therefore influence both the quality (accuracy) and quantity (detection) of perception.”
Brown also points to this as a possible explanation of the
phenomenon: “[the higher rate of detection of single light flashes]
involves quieting some of the higher mental processes which normally
obstruct the perception of subtle events.” In other words, the practice
may temporarily or permanently alter some of the top-down processing
involved in filtering subtle events usually deemed noise by the
perceptual filters.
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