A recurring question on this blog is how much of what we take to be fixed about experience—time, space, agency, the bounded self—is actually a construction the brain assembles from past experience and could, in principle, take apart. Laukkonen and Slagter’s 2021 paper “From many to (n)one: Meditation and the plasticity of the predictive mind” gave that question its most ambitious recent framing. Their proposal is elegant in its simplicity: the three meditation styles most studied in contemplative science—focused attention (FA), open monitoring (OM), and non-dual awareness (ND)—are not separate practices but points on a single continuum. Each one, in turn, relinquishes a more deeply engrained habit of prediction, bringing the practitioner closer to the here-and-now and progressively flattening the predictive hierarchy until even the sense of self falls away. Meditation, in their metaphor, “prunes the counterfactual tree.”
It is a beautiful theory. The harder question is whether the brain imaging literature actually supports it, or whether the data have been arranged to fit a staircase that was drawn in advance. I want to use one study to think this through, because it is the rare case where the methodology is strong enough to bear the interpretive weight: a 2024 preregistered MEG study from Trautwein, Schweitzer, Dor-Ziderman, Berkovich-Ohana and colleagues, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, titled “Suspending the Embodied Self in Meditation Attenuates Beta Oscillations in the Posterior Medial Cortex” (Trautwein et al., 2024).
What the older evidence looked like
First, the backdrop. At the coarse level, the imaging literature does rhyme with the continuum. Focused attention is the best-characterized rung: meta-analysis associates it with activation in attentional-control machinery—dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, dorsal anterior cingulate, insula—and with deactivation of the default mode network, the system tied to self-referential thought and mind-wandering (Fox et al., 2016). That DMN quieting is exactly what the framework needs to claim FA pulls one out of the “narrative self.” Open monitoring shifts the picture toward more distributed, less object-bound dynamics and reduced coupling within posterior default-mode regions. And the non-dual end—self-dissolution—had been linked, in a series of small studies, to attenuation of beta-band activity in right parietal cortex and to reductions in the precuneus (Dor-Ziderman et al., 2013; Josipovic, 2014).
The problem is that the non-dual evidence, which is where the theory makes its most startling claims, rested on the thinnest foundation. The canonical neurophenomenological studies in this lineage ran on twelve subjects (Dor-Ziderman et al., 2013). They typically used rest as the comparison condition—a notoriously leaky baseline, since long-term meditators’ resting brains already drift toward meditative configurations. And the interpretive leap from “beta drops in the parietal cortex” to “the self-model has dissolved” is the reverse-inference trap in its purest form: those regions and rhythms do many things. This is the kind of literature the fifteen-author “Mind the Hype” consensus paper had in mind when it warned that small samples, flexible analysis, and post-hoc storytelling in contemplative neuroscience could mislead the public and the field alike (Van Dam et al., 2018).
So the right question is not “does some imaging study support the continuum”—several do, loosely—but “does any study support it under conditions rigorous enough that we should believe the correlation means what it is claimed to mean.” That is what makes the 2024 paper worth dwelling on.
A study built to fail honestly
The design corrects, one by one, the weaknesses of the work that preceded it. Forty-six long-term meditators (mean lifetime practice around 3,800 hours) were trained to volitionally modulate their embodied self-experience inside an MEG scanner (Trautwein et al., 2024). Hypotheses and the analysis plan were preregistered, and the researchers were blinded to the experimental condition during preprocessing—two practices that close off the garden of forking paths where false positives flourish.
Most importantly, the study did not rely on a rest baseline alone. It used an active control: meditators alternated between dissolving their sense of self-boundaries (the condition of interest) and maintaining a clear sense of self-boundaries while meditating just as hard. This is the crucial move. A meditation-versus-rest contrast differs in dozens of ways beyond the phenomenology you care about. A dissolution-versus-maintenance contrast, within the same person in the same posture doing the same kind of effortful practice, isolates the self-boundary variable itself.
And then they did something I find methodologically beautiful. Rather than validating the meditative state with a checkbox questionnaire, they ran detailed microphenomenological interviews after the scan and used them to define, in advance of looking at the brain data, a subgroup of “full dissolvers”—participants who reported the most complete suspension of agency, first-person perspective, and self-location.
What they found
The headline result confirms the framework’s boldest prediction. When dissolution states were contrasted with the active control, power dropped specifically in the high-beta band, source-localized to the posterior medial cortex—the posterior cingulate and precuneus—and to lateral parietal regions. The peak frequency was 27 Hz, replicating an earlier single-case study to the hertz.
The effect was graded in a way that genuinely echoes the continuum. Broader reductions in somatomotor and dorsal parietal regions appeared even at lower levels of dissolution across the whole sample, whereas the posterior-cingulate/precuneus reductions distinguished only the full dissolvers. This is a real neural gradient tracking increasingly basal dismantling of the self—just what “unraveling increasingly basal forms of selfhood” would predict. And the effects scaled with both lifetime hours of meditation and, within the dissolution experience, with the reported loss of first-person perspective and self-location. The brain change tracked the depth of the experience, not merely the instruction to have it.
The authors themselves reach for predictive processing to explain it. They speculate that the beta reductions reflect the suspension of body- and agency-related predictions, leaning on models in which beta-band oscillations carry top-down predictions and precision estimates that modulate the bottom-up signaling of prediction errors. In other words, the convergence between this data and the Friston-style account is not something Laukkonen and Slagter imposed from outside. The experimentalists arrive at the same place.
The finding that should unsettle the field
Here is the result I keep returning to. The neural changes correlated with the interview-derived experiential measures—but not with the classical self-report instruments. The widely used five-dimensional altered-states questionnaire produced an “oceanic boundlessness” score that did not correlate at all with the phenomenological summary derived from the interviews (r = 0.06). The deep first-person interview and the standard psychometric checkbox were, in effect, measuring different things, and only the former tracked the brain.
Sit with what that implies retroactively. A large fraction of the prior imaging literature validated its meditative “states” precisely with the kind of thin, questionnaire-based measure that here failed to predict the neural signature at all. If the checkbox doesn’t track the brain, then studies that used the checkbox to certify that their subjects were “in” the non-dual state may have been correlating brain activity with a label rather than with the experience the label names. The 2024 study’s strongest contribution may be less the precuneus finding than this quiet demonstration that phenomenological rigor is not optional decoration—it is load-bearing.
Where this leaves the continuum
So does brain imaging confirm the many-to-(n)one model? My honest reading is: partially, gradedly, and only under conditions most of the supporting literature did not meet.
The reservations remain real. The studies that compare FA, OM, and ND almost always do so within expert meditators who already hold the three-category taxonomy as their own theory of their practice—so the taxonomy is an input as much as an output, and “the brain states differ” does not establish “the brain states lie on a single monotonic dimension.” The most comprehensive meta-analysis found the practices reliably dissociable but found convergence across them to be the exception rather than the rule, and offered only suggestive evidence for the non-dual category specifically (Fox et al., 2016). Effect sizes across the field are medium, not large, with substantial heterogeneity. The scanner environment itself—noise, supine posture—has been shown to shallow and distort the very states under study. And the framework absorbs apparently disconfirming results (Pagnoni’s reading of just-sitting Zen as increasing counterfactual richness, for instance) by partitioning state from trait, a plausible move that also makes the theory harder to falsify.
But against all that, the 2024 study stands as something the older work was not: a preregistered, blinded, actively-controlled, phenomenologically-anchored demonstration that the most radical claim in the whole framework—that advanced practice can dismantle the embodied self—corresponds to a specific, replicable, dose-dependent neural signature, read by its own authors in predictive-processing terms (Trautwein et al., 2024). The staircase metaphor still outruns the data. The top step, at least, now has a floor under it.
A closing thought
What draws me to this, beyond the meditation question, is what it says about the self as such. The deepest premise shared by the predictive-processing account and this experiment is that the sense of being a bounded, located, agentic first person is not a given but a construction—a model the brain maintains through ongoing prediction, and one that can be set down and, evidently, picked back up. If the self is a modulable predictive construct rather than a fixed seat of agency, then questions about what happens to authorship and agency when we offload regulation—onto a practice, onto a tool, onto an AI machine—become questions about how plastic that construct really is, and at what cost it bends. A meditator dissolving the precuneus’s beta rhythm and a person feeling like a diminished author of their own actions may be probing the same machinery from opposite directions.
References
Fox, K. C. R., Dixon, M. L., Nijeboer, S., Girn, M., Floman, J. L., Lifshitz, M., Ellamil, M., Sedlmeier, P., & Christoff, K. (2016). Functional neuroanatomy of meditation: A review and meta-analysis of 78 functional neuroimaging investigations. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 65, 208–228. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2016.03.021
Dor-Ziderman, Y., Berkovich-Ohana, A., Glicksohn, J., & Goldstein, A. (2013). Mindfulness-induced selflessness: A MEG neurophenomenological study. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 7, 582. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2013.00582
Josipovic, Z. (2014). Neural correlates of nondual awareness in meditation. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1307(1), 9–18. https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.12261
Laukkonen, R. E., & Slagter, H. A. (2021). From many to (n)one: Meditation and the plasticity of the predictive mind. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 128, 199–217. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2021.06.021
Trautwein, F.-M., Schweitzer, Y., Dor-Ziderman, Y., Nave, O., Ataria, Y., Fulder, S., & Berkovich-Ohana, A. (2024). Suspending the embodied self in meditation attenuates beta oscillations in the posterior medial cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 44(26), e1182232024. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1182-23.2024
Van Dam, N. T., van Vugt, M. K., Vago, D. R., Schmalzl, L., Saron, C. D., Olendzki, A., Meissner, T., Lazar, S. W., Kerr, C. E., Gorchov, J., Fox, K. C. R., Field, B. A., Britton, W. B., Brefczynski-Lewis, J. A., & Meyer, D. E. (2018). Mind the hype: A critical evaluation and prescriptive agenda for research on mindfulness and meditation. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 13(1), 36–61. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691617709589
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Note: Back and forth interactions with Claude Opus 4.8 generated the above text