Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison trained participants in compassion meditation over two weeks. Using functional MRI, they measured brain activity before and after the training. The results showed increased activation in brain regions associated with empathy and understanding others’ emotional states.
The study also measured behavior. Participants who completed the compassion training showed more altruistic behavior in economic decision-making games compared to a control group. The brain changes correlated with the behavioral changes, suggesting a genuine shift rather than a superficial one.
This research is relevant beyond the meditation cushion. It suggests that the capacity for compassion is not fixed at birth or in childhood. It is trainable, and the training produces both neural and behavioral evidence of change. Two weeks of focused practice was enough to detect the difference.
Source: Yoga Research: Brain Structure & Function on ashtanga.tech. Original research.
