Practice strengthens the connection between the prefrontal cortex and the rest of the brain, allowing for better "selective attention" and the ability to ignore distractions. The "Dose-Response" Relationship The authors categorize the benefits based on "dosage":
Long-term practitioners show a dampened amygdala response. They don't just feel calmer; their "alarm system" is physically less reactive to triggers. Altered Traits: Science Reveals How Meditation ...
Meditation quiets the Default Mode Network (DMN), the area of the brain responsible for mind-wandering and the "self-obsessed" internal monologue. This leads to a decrease in rumination and anxiety. Meditation quiets the Default Mode Network (DMN), the
Quick improvements in focus and stress, but the effects are fragile and disappear without consistent practice. Altered Traits serves as a much-needed reality check
Altered Traits serves as a much-needed reality check for the wellness industry. It validates meditation as a rigorous mental training tool while being honest about what it can—and cannot—do. It shifts the narrative from "self-help" to "neuroplasticity," proving that we can intentionally shape our character by training our minds.
After roughly 1,000–10,000 hours, structural brain changes become more permanent.
Most people meditate for a quick stress fix (a ). However, the book argues that the true value of practice lies in traits : lasting shifts in brain function and structure. Expert meditators (those with over 10,000 hours of practice) show brain patterns that are fundamentally different from the average person, even while asleep. Key Scientific Takeaways