Welcome, 
innovative viewers, to 
Science and Spirituality. 
The human brain is 
a vastly complex organ 
containing 
some 50 to 100 billion 
nerve cells or neurons. 
One of the amazing aspects 
of the brain 
is that it continues 
to produce new neurons 
throughout our life 
and is able to redefine 
its structure over time 
after new experiences 
such as learning a new skill 
or seeing a new city. 
This re-arranging 
of neural pathways 
is referred to 
as brain plasticity 
or neuro-plasticity. 
What role 
does meditation play 
in the development 
of our brain, 
how it functions, 
and the conscious states 
we experience? 
For answers 
to these questions, 
we turned to 
Dr. Fred Travis, the Chair 
of the Maharishi Vedic 
Science Department and 
Director of the Center 
for Brain, Consciousness 
and Cognition at 
the Maharishi University 
of Management 
in Iowa, USA. 
For the past 20 years 
he has researched 
the evolution 
of the human brain and 
investigated the nature 
of consciousness. 
He has published 
40 academic papers 
regarding research 
in these areas.
I’m interested in 
how the brain changes 
over the whole lifespan and 
how different experiences 
affects the brain, 
how stress, how fatigue 
affects the brain, 
how learning 
affects the brain, also 
how meditation practice 
affects the brain.
We were fortunate 
to see first-hand 
some of the research 
Dr. Travis is conducting 
regarding 
how meditation influences 
the brain’s functions. 
We have here today one 
of our first-year students, 
Tor Travis. 
We’re recording 
his brain waves while 
he’s doing computer tasks. 
And we’ll see 
how these change 
while he’s here 
at Maharishi University 
of Management. 
What we find 
is the meditation 
that we practice here, 
the Transcendental 
Meditation technique, 
has very profound effects 
on increasing 
the orderliness 
in the front parts 
of the brain that 
has to do with thinking, 
decision making, and 
has to do with planning 
and judgment. 
So we’re just documenting 
how his education 
is affecting his brain. 
Dr. Travis is using an EEG 
(electroencephalogram) 
machine to get a reading 
of Tor Travis’s brain. 
The EEG machine 
can detect different 
brain wave patterns 
known as beta, alpha, 
theta, and delta. 
These four patterns 
represent a continuum 
of consciousness. 
For example, 
beta waves are associated 
with a keen alertness 
of our surroundings, 
while delta waves 
are present when 
we are in deep sleep. 
What we have here is 
electrical activity going on 
at thirty-two points 
on Tor’s scalp. 
And so we see there 
all the wires coming 
from different points 
on his head. 
Each wire 
is being reflected 
by one line here. 
These here on the top are 
the front left of the brain; 
these are the back; 
these are the front right. 
Here we have when 
he just put his attention 
to the screen to look at 
what is happening. 
So now we’ll be looking 
at his brain waves while 
he’s performing his task. 
He’ll press begin, and 
he’ll see a star, hear a tone. 
So this is happening 
right here. 
So there’s the asterisk; 
there’s a response. 
We see this activity here 
when he actually responded. 
This is a simple task. 
What types of brain waves 
are present when one is 
in a state of meditation? 
A student at the school 
now points out for us
how Tor Travis’s 
brain waves change. 
He’s now 
doing his meditation. 
During this meditation 
you can look at 
the different changes 
in his brain pattern. 
Generally you can see 
that it’s more calm 
and more quiet. 
So it indicates that 
the activity of the brain 
has become subtle. 
So this is typical, it’s 
a very low brain wave.
Dr. Travis describes 
a research study 
in which he was involved 
that not only measured 
the brain activity 
of college students 
who learned 
Transcendental Meditation 
but the longer-term results 
of practicing meditation 
on the brain.
We followed
50 college students 
and half of them learned 
the Transcendental 
Meditation practice 
and half did not. 
Those who learned 
the TM practice, 
what we found is 
at the end of two and half 
months of practicing TM, 
they had much more 
of the brain signature 
seen during meditation. 
What was happening 
(was) the experience 
during meditation was 
being brought into activity. 
Those students 
who did not learn TM 
actually had less 
integrated brain activity. 
We looked at 
their sleepiness. 
They had a greater chance 
of being more sleepy; 
they were more fatigued. 
We looked at their 
autonomic functioning, 
how irritable, how jumpy, 
how anxious they were, 
and that also went up. 
What this is finding is 
that experience 
is changing the brain. 
One unique aspect of 
transcendental meditation 
is people can master it 
very quickly.
It takes a matter 
of a few weeks. 
And then the benefits 
are seen in activity. 
You learn to contact 
a new state of mind, 
the source of all the many 
thoughts that you have 
during the day 
and take the attention 
to that level of creativity, 
of intelligence. 
Then when you come out 
into activity, you have 
that connection that 
you’re bringing with you. 
And so we find people 
with Transcendental 
Meditation practice 
can quickly settle
the mind down with
the source of thought. 
We call that 
pure consciousness 
or transcendental 
consciousness.
And then over time, they 
bring that into activity.
We will be right back 
with more 
from our interview 
with Dr. Fred Travis of 
the Maharishi University 
of Management 
after these brief messages. 
This is 
Science and Spirituality. 
Please stay tuned to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Science and Spirituality. 
At the Center 
for Brain, Consciousness 
and Cognition at 
the Maharishi University 
of Management 
in Iowa, USA 
scientists are exploring 
how the brain develops 
over one’s lifespan and 
how meditation practice 
affects the this vital organ. 
Dr. Fred Travis is 
the director of the center. 
As we saw 
in the last segment, 
Maharishi University 
student Tor Travis’s 
brain waves 
appeared different 
when he was doing 
a simple task 
versus meditating. 
We asked Dr. Travis 
about the nature 
of brain activity 
during meditation and 
whether it is more active 
at this time. 
It’s not quantity, 
it’s quality. 
So it’s not 
that suddenly your brain 
is using more resources 
and is more active 
than ever before. 
Rather what you see is 
the quality of functioning, 
that is the activity 
in one part of the brain 
is now integrated, 
is coherent with activity 
in another part of the brain. 
You see 
a greater integration 
of brain functioning. 
When we have 
an integration 
of brain functioning, 
it means an integration 
also of psychological 
functioning, how you think.
Dr. Travis says 
the merging of activity 
from different regions 
of the brain that occurs 
during meditation then 
in turn influences our 
normal conscious state.
 
What happens 
as you practice the TM 
(Transcendental 
Meditation) program is 
you begin to have 
a broad angle focus. 
This is what I mean 
by integration of 
two styles of functioning. 
You have a problem 
and rather than 
being lost in the problem 
and not being able 
to see the solution, you 
still have that broader 
playful awareness, 
which is where you feel 
the solutions is. 
A lot of recent research 
on creativity and 
how you solve problems 
with intuition, 
what they find is 
diffused alpha activity 
over the whole brain 
during the minutes 
before you come up 
with that idea. 
What you’re seeing is 
suddenly all parts 
of the brain are beginning 
to communicate. 
It’s not the 
logical linear thought of 
the frontal rational area, 
but it’s actually all parts 
of the brain playful, 
concrete, emotion; 
they can all be part 
of the problem solving. 
That’s where 
the creative insight comes. 
This is what we see 
with TM practice; 
Dr. Travis also discussed 
the “fight or flight” 
response which is 
an automatic reaction 
of the autonomic nervous 
system, specifically the 
sympathetic nervous system, 
to a perceived danger and 
its relation to meditation. 
When such a response 
is set off, the body 
releases hormones like 
adrenaline and cortisol 
which influence 
such bodily functions 
such as heart rate 
and digestion, and 
gives a boost of energy 
in order for the individual 
to take action. 
In modern day settings, 
this type of response 
by the sympathetic 
nervous system 
is likely due to stress 
experienced in our lives. 
While useful in situations 
where we must take 
quick action to protect 
ourselves or others, 
having our body 
respond this way to 
something routine like stress 
is not beneficial 
for our health. 
Dr. Travis says meditation 
can change the setting off 
of the reaction because, 
among other things, 
the brain has been changed 
by meditation practice.
We tend to get into activity 
and the sympathetic, the 
fight or flight response 
gets more and more active. 
We find when we practice 
TM (Transcendental 
Meditation) and 
the mind settles down
to the source of thought, 
the physiology, the body, 
is also settling down. 
It's almost 
as if it’s resetting where 
its natural resting point is. 
We find that 
the level of fight or flight 
is sympathetic activation. 
It goes down 
during meditation 
and then starts 
to go lower and lower 
in activity, afterwards. 
We find stress related
diseases disappear.
For instance 
hyper-tension, 
which means “chronic.” 
That means 
you have to take a pill 
to keep it under control. 
You find 
that adding TM Practice 
actually reduces 
hyper-tension. 
Just because the whole 
mind, the whole body 
is settling down. 
We can understand 
the body is having 
its own intelligence. 
The body 
is really composed of 
many feedback loops.
And what disease is, 
is when one 
of these feedback loops 
is disrupted. 
By settling the mind down, 
this inner intelligent, 
the body is enlivened. 
And so we find the body, 
the immune system 
is stronger, 
and we’re healthier. 
To close, 
with the scientific work 
of dedicated researchers 
like Dr. Travis, 
the world is seeing 
how important meditation is 
to constructively shaping 
our brain’s development. 
Research data is showing 
that by meditating, 
our brain benefits 
and in return we enjoy 
a more peaceful life, we 
have the enhanced ability 
to reach our true potential 
and we are better able 
achieve optimum health.
Our sincere appreciation 
goes to Dr. Fred Travis 
at the Center 
for Brain, Consciousness 
and Cognition 
at Maharishi University 
of Management 
in Iowa, USA 
for sharing his time and 
knowledge on the subject 
of the effects of meditation 
on the brain. 
Thank you, 
intelligent viewers, 
for joining us 
for today’s show. 
Please stay with us 
for Words of Wisdom, 
coming up next after 
Noteworthy News 
on Supreme Master Television. 
May peace and good health 
be upon you 
and your family.