Authors
Czajko, S., Zorn, J., Abdoun, O., Margulies, D. S., Blanke, O., Lutz, A.
Abstract
Nonduality is a foundational but conceptually elusive notion across several contemplative traditions. Nondual traditions challenge the assumption that a subject-object structure characteristic of ordinary experience is an intrinsic feature of conscious awareness. However, little remains known about the neurocognitive mechanisms associated with such experiential state. Here, we investigated how Open Presence (OP) meditation, a form of non-dual mindfulness practice, modulates bodily self-representation and large-scale brain functional organization. We combined the Full-Body Illusion Experience (FBIE), a virtual reality paradigm manipulating bodily self-processing, with resting-state functional connectivity gradient analyses in expert meditators (>10,000 hours of practice) and meditation novices. We hypothesized that OP would attenuate bodily self susceptibility as measured by FBIE and increase large-scale integration of functional brain networks, consistent with prior findings linking reduced self-boundaries and ego-dissolution to increased connectome integration. Seventy-five participants (28 experts, 47 novices) underwent fMRI scanning during OP meditation. Brain network organization was assessed using connectivity gradients and network dispersion/ eccentricity metrics. Group differences were evaluated using bootstrap statistics and support vector classification. Compared with novices, expert practitioners showed reduced global network eccentricity during OP, particularly within dorsal attention, ventral attention, and frontoparietal networks, suggesting greater large-scale integration of functional networks. These neural patterns were positively correlated with FBIE self-report measures and negatively with cognitive defusion scores, a construct thought to reflect reduced self-grasping toward thoughts and mental contents. Together, these findings suggest that nondual meditation is associated with alterations in self-representation and increased large-scale functional integration, providing candidate neural markers of nondual awareness.
Preprint server:
bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 04 Jul 2026.
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