Meditation isn't a single practice—it's an umbrella term for dozens of techniques that train your mind in fundamentally different ways. While you'll find countless meditation styles marketed online, research shows they fall into three distinct categories based on how they direct your attention. Understanding this framework helps you cut through the noise and find a method that matches your brain, schedule, and goals.
Neuroscientists and meditation researchers have identified three major meditation categories based on how practitioners use attention during practice. Each category produces different brain activity patterns and serves different purposes.
Focused Attention Meditation trains you to concentrate on a single object—your breath, a mantra, a candle flame, or a body sensation. When your mind wanders (and it will), you gently redirect it back to the chosen anchor. This category strengthens concentration circuits in your prefrontal cortex, similar to how weightlifting builds muscle. Beginners often start here because the instructions are straightforward: pick something, focus on it, return when distracted.
Open Monitoring Meditation takes the opposite approach. Instead of narrowing your focus, you expand awareness to observe whatever arises—thoughts, emotions, sounds, physical sensations—without getting caught up in any of it. You're not trying to concentrate; you're cultivating a panoramic awareness that notices everything withou...