Tums
Tums
10/14/2014
Psychology 110
Paper 2: Meditation
associated with being able to significantly increase the body temperature in extreme
large amounts of steam while drying soaked sheets that are placed on their naked bodies,
while sitting in the subzero Himalayas. In 1982, researchers Herbert Benson and John
Lehmann from Harvard Medical School went to investigate these claims and were able to
confirm such gains in temperature, measuring increases in the fingers and toes as much as
8.3 degrees Celsius in the three Indo-Tibetan yogis they studied.[1] However, Bensons
study was criticized eight years later in 1990 for only measuring the somatic changes and
disregarding the cognitive side of the meditative practice. Furthermore, only the digits of
the body were observed to have significant increase whereas the core body temperature
Kozhevnikovs team observed both the somatic component, which includes two different
types of breathing techniques, various body postures, and movements as well as the
at certain points in the body, particularly the spinal cord. To test each factor,
Kozhevnikov designed an experiment in which seven expert meditators from remote
Tibetan monasteries practiced tummo while their peripheral body temperature (fifth
finger), core temperature (armpit), and neural activity (via EEG) were monitored. As a
control, they also studied eleven Western practitioners who only used the somatic
components of tummo, leaving out the meditative visualizations. The results were
stunning, as both groups were able to elevate their peripheral and core temperaturesthe
only difference between the two was that the Western practitioners could only raise it to
ranges within the normal body temperature (33.8 degrees Celsius). Combined with the
neurocognitive activity, the expert tummo practitioners could reach feverish temperatures
of up to 38.5 degrees and also maintain that temperature much longer than their Western
counterparts. In sum, the Kozhevnikov team was successful in confirming the knowledge
from Tibetan Buddhist traditions: through the combination of isomeric breathing and
tummos efficacy by setting certain controls for both the somatic and mental components,
one great limitation would be its extremely limited sample size. This could have been due
to the difficulty in accessing tummo participants or the sacredness of the practice causing
a small population to select from to begin with. Another limitation would be its failure to
directly measure breathing patterns between the two groups and only monitoring
electrical brain activity and body temperature. Because of the immense training and years
of personal practice a Tibetan monk must go through to perfect tummo, differences in the
specific breathing technique between the monks and the relatively inexperienced
Westerners could be expected and therefore would have skewed the results.
manner would have great potential in the field of medicine. Theoretically, one could
mimic the conditions of a fever to fight infections and also boost resistance and
immunity. In addition, if the Tibetan monks are able to thrive in extreme cold
functioning in other similar hostile environments. Of course, simply being able to engage
in such an advanced form of meditation that requires such rigorous preparation, years of
Works Cited
1. Benson, H., Lehmann, J. W., Malhotra, M. S., Goodman, R. F., Hopkins, J., et al.
(1982) Body temperature changes during the practice of g-tummo yoga. Nature
295: 234236. doi: 10.1038/295234a0.
2. Kozhevnikov, M., Elliott, J., Shephard, J., & Gramann, K. (2013). Neurocognitive
and somatic components of temperature increases during g-Tummo Meditation:
Legend and reality. PLoS ONE 8(3): e58244. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0058244