The University of Miami Hurricanes football program will partner with UM neuroscientist Dr. Amishi Jha for an innovative research study to investigate how mindfulness training can help football players better cope with the high stakes and high demands of collegiate athletics.
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UM Neuroscientist, Dr. Amishi Jha, conducts brainwave |
“The question we ask is if mindfulness training – which has been found to benefit high-stress groups like soldiers, Marines, CEOs and college students – can help student athletes in their academic and athletic performance,” said Dr. Jha, associate professor in the UM College of Arts & SciencesDepartment of Psychology and director of contemplative neuroscience for the UMindfulness Initiative.
Jha, the lead researcher on the study, is collaborating with Scott Rogers, director of programs and training for the UMindfulness Initiative and of UM Law's Mindfulness in Law Program. Their previous research found that mindfulness training helps curb mind wandering and improve attention as high-stress undergraduates near exam season. Jha will begin the project this summer with Rogers delivering an innovative mindfulness program to UM's football student-athletes.
Mindfulness involves focusing attention on present-moment experience and observing one's thoughts and feelings without judgement. "Through mindfulness training," suggests Rogers, "student-athletes may be able to develop a set of mental tools and resources that will serve them well on the field and in the classroom."
The Jha-Hurricanes football collaboration is the first phase of a larger "Cane Brain Project". The project aims to determine if mindfulness training might help protect collegiate football players' brains, an area of interest that is drawing national attention. A recent study in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reports that the hippocampus, a part of the brain necessary for memory, is smaller in college football players – especially those who have had concussions. Other research has shown that mindfulness training may increase brain gray matter density in this area.
“While better helmet design may help protect their brains from the outside in, very little known about what types of cognitive training exercises might help protect athletes’ brains from the inside out,” said Jha. “We are eager to see if mindfulness training might help.”
Josh Rooks, a graduate student in the Department of Psychology and a member of Jha’s research team, said, “Our very first step is to see if cognitive performance and academic performance benefits from mindfulness training in collegiate football players.”
Rooks, a former college football player who practiced mindfulness during his time as a tight end for the Northwestern University Wildcats, joined Jha’s lab in 2012.
“I recently returned from the ACC Conference meetings and a symposium given by the NCAA’s Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Brian Hainline, MD. Dr. Hainline shared with us two of the greatest challenges facing college athletes; (1) overuse (as a result of pre-puberty specialization and year-round participation) and (2) mental health and welfare,” said Al Golden, UM head football coach. “The latter is why we are thrilled to be partnering with Dr. Jha to study mindfulness training."
He continues, “Mental health is a vital, yet often overlooked component, of academic and athletic achievement. Our football program is excited about mindfulness training and enhancing student-athlete focus, stress management, working memory, and improving the overall competitive environment here at The U.”
Recently, Congressman Tim Ryan (D-Ohio), a mindfulness practitioner who will be speaking at UM this summer through the UMindfulness lecture series, invited former NFL players and military veterans to the Capitol to discuss the benefits of mindfulness in their recovery from brain trauma and post-traumatic stress disorder. In addition, the 2014 Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks revealed that many team members practiced mindfulness meditation throughout their winning season.
June 03, 2014