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Glossary›Default Mode Network

Glossary

Default Mode Network

A set of interconnected brain regions most active during rest and introspection, associated with self-referential thought, mind-wandering, and the sense of self.

What is Default Mode Network?

The Default Mode Network (DMN) is a constellation of brain regions that exhibit synchronized activity when the mind is at rest and not engaged in externally focused tasks. First formally identified through neuroimaging studies in 2001, the network includes the medial prefrontal cortex, posterior cingulate cortex, precuneus, and angular gyrus, among other structures. These regions consistently show decreased activity during attention-demanding tasks and increased activity during wakeful rest, leading researchers to term it “default” activity.

The DMN is principally associated with self-referential processing—thinking about oneself, autobiographical memory retrieval, envisioning the future, considering the perspectives of others (theory of mind), and the phenomenon commonly described as mind-wandering. Functional connectivity studies demonstrate that these regions communicate with one another even in the absence of external stimulation, suggesting an intrinsic network architecture that supports internally directed cognition.

Origins & Lineage

The Default Mode Network was discovered by neurologist Marcus Raichle and colleagues at Washington University in St. Louis. In a 2001 paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Raichle’s team noticed that certain brain regions consistently showed decreased metabolic activity during goal-directed tasks compared to passive rest states. Rather than dismissing this “resting” activity as neural noise, they proposed that the brain maintains an organized, baseline mode of function—the default mode.

The term “default mode network” was formally introduced in a 2001 paper, though the initial observation of task-negative regions dates to earlier PET imaging studies in the 1990s. By 2005, work by Randy Buckner, Jessica Andrews-Hanna, and Daniel Schacter at Harvard had further characterized the network’s anatomical components and functional properties. Subsequent research by Judson Brewer at Yale and others linked DMN activity to the subjective experience of self and ego, noting that meditation practices appear to modulate or quiet this network.

How It’s Practiced

The Default Mode Network is not a practice but a neurobiological phenomenon observable through functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and other neuroimaging techniques. However, contemplative practices have been studied for their effects on DMN activity. Experienced meditators, particularly those trained in focused attention and open monitoring techniques, show reduced DMN activation during meditation compared to controls. Psychedelic compounds—psilocybin, LSD, and ayahuasca—have been demonstrated to decrease DMN connectivity, an effect hypothesized to underlie experiences of ego dissolution and unitive consciousness reported by users.

In clinical settings, neurofeedback protocols have been developed to train individuals to modulate DMN activity, though these remain largely experimental. Researchers measure real-time brain activity and provide visual or auditory feedback, allowing participants to learn voluntary regulation of network dynamics.

Default Mode Network Today

The DMN has become a focal point in consciousness studies, psychiatry, and contemplative science. Research institutes including Johns Hopkins Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research, the Mind & Life Institute, and University of California Centers for Mindfulness investigate how contemplative practices and psychedelics affect the network. Depression, anxiety, ADHD, autism, and Alzheimer’s disease all show altered DMN connectivity patterns, making the network a target for therapeutic intervention.

Retreat centers offering silent meditation intensives—Vipassana centers, Zen monasteries, and secular mindfulness retreats—provide environments where practitioners may experientially encounter states associated with DMN attenuation, though participants rarely use this neuroscientific terminology. Psychedelic-assisted therapy trials, now underway at multiple academic medical centers, explicitly monitor DMN changes as potential mechanisms for clinical efficacy.

Common Misconceptions

The Default Mode Network is not synonymous with the ego or self, though it supports self-referential cognition. The DMN is a descriptive neural correlate, not a causal explanation for consciousness or identity. Decreased DMN activity does not necessarily produce spiritual experiences; it correlates with certain subjective states but does not determine them.

The network is not inherently pathological. While overactive or rigid DMN patterns associate with rumination and depression, the network serves adaptive functions including autobiographical memory consolidation, future planning, and social cognition. The goal is not to eliminate DMN activity but to develop flexible transitions between network states.

Finally, meditation does not “turn off” the Default Mode Network. Studies show modulation, not cessation, of activity. The relationship between subjective meditative states and DMN dynamics remains an active area of investigation with considerable variability across individuals and practice traditions.

How to Begin

For those interested in understanding the Default Mode Network scientifically, Marcus Raichle’s 2015 review article “The Brain’s Default Mode Network” in the Annual Review of Neuroscience provides comprehensive technical overview. Michael Pollan’s How to Change Your Mind (2018) discusses DMN research in accessible prose within the context of psychedelic science.

To experientially explore states associated with altered DMN activity, evidence-based mindfulness programs such as Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) offer secular, research-validated training. Judson Brewer’s work on craving and the DMN is detailed in his book The Craving Mind (2017), which bridges neuroscience and Buddhist psychology.

For academic inquiry, the Human Connectome Project provides open-access neuroimaging data including DMN connectivity patterns. Researchers and clinicians can access protocols through university neuroimaging centers offering fMRI training and neurofeedback certification programs.

Related terms

vipassana meditationego dissolutionmindfulness based stress reductionpsychedelic assisted therapyneurofeedbackself inquiry
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