Jump to main content
Press Office and Crossmedia Communications
University News
Press Office and Crossmedia Communications 
University News Research

More Relaxation and Less Stress Through Combined Yoga Techniques

Chemnitz University of Technology publishes first comprehensive study on the effectiveness of combined yoga exercises

Yoga is often equated with acrobatic stretching exercises that are supposed to induce relaxation and a better body awareness. This benefit has been scientifically proven. What has been little researched so far is how different yoga techniques such as the so-called "sun salutation" or breathing exercises as well as meditation work in combination. Dr. Karin Matko, research associate at the Professorship General and Biopsychology (Head: Prof. Dr. Udo Rudolph) at Chemnitz University of Technology, addressed this question as the first author. Prof. Dr. Peter Sedlmeier, head of the Professorship Research Methods and Evaluation at Chemnitz University of Technology, and Dr. med. Holger C. Bringmann from Charité Berlin collaborated in the study.

In her evaluation of results from 19 meta-analyses of a total of 330 studies – a so-called "meta-synthesis" – the psychologist found that the combination of different yoga techniques is related to their benefits. Thus, a combination increases therapeutic or preventive benefits. "Our results, which are mostly consistent across the studies we examined, show that combining different elements in yoga is better. In almost all cases, combined interventions were superior to simpler interventions," says Karin Matko – regardless of whether the problem is high blood pressure, diabetes or depression. The combination of physical exercises with breathing techniques or meditation was particularly effective. However, there were also particularities: "In the case of asthma, for example, yoga only works if it includes breathing exercises," says Matko, who is also a trained yoga teacher.

Results also confirmed experimentally

In another study, Matko was also able to confirm this result experimentally. She compared the effects of four different combinations of yoga, meditation and the ethical foundations of yoga on healthy subjects with no previous experience: "If you want to avoid or reduce stress, the combination of yoga and meditation seems to be particularly helpful," she explains.

In addition, Matko and her colleagues Sedlmeier and Bringmann show that a combination of meditation and ethical education can sustainably increase well-being: "The intense engagement with oneself during the ethical education sessions seems to have had a really lasting effect on our participants." The researcher concludes that it may be well worth decorating yoga with its original "icing on the cake" and practicing it together with meditation or other traditional practices.

The results of this research have been published online by LIDSEN Publishing Inc. and in Frontiers in Psychology.

Publication:

Matko, K., Bringmann, H. C., & Sedlmeier, P. (2021). Effects of different components of yoga: A meta-synthesis. OBM Integrative and Complementary Medicine, 6(3), Article 26. https://doi.org/10.21926/obm.icm.2103030

Matko, K., Sedlmeier, P., & Bringmann, H. C. (2021). Differential effects of ethical education, physical Hatha yoga, and mantra meditation on well-being and stress in healthy participants – An experimental single-case study. Frontiers in Psychology, 12https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.672301

For further information, please contact Dr. Karin Matko, Professorship of General and Biopsychology, e-mail karin.matko@psychologie.tu-chemnitz.de, tel. +49 (0)371/531-37509.

(Article: Matthias Fejes / Translation: Brent Benofsky)

Matthias Fejes
28.04.2022

All "University News" articles

  • Menschen stehen vor einer Leinwand

    Successful summer school at Chemnitz University of Technology

    The Department of Media Psychology and the Across University Alliance welcomed young media enthusiasts from nine different countries to the summer school "How much science is in science fiction?" …

  • Frau steht vor einer weißen Wand

    From Ulaanbaatar to Chemnitz

    Daariimaa Chuluunbaatar is studying computer science at the Mongolian University of Science and Technology. Thanks to the „Saxon Science Liaison Office” in the Mongolian capital Ulaanbaatar and the „Saxon Student Mobility Program”, she has been a guest student at Chemnitz University of Technology since May and reports on her impressions. …

  • microrobot sitting on a fingertip Article contains a video

    Smart Microrobots Learn to Communicate and Collaborate in Water

    Researchers at Chemnitz University of Technology demonstrate autonomous micro-scale communication and coordinated motion in a new class of self-sufficient electronic microrobots …

  • Girl in front of building.

    MIKA goes English

    Comprehensively redesigned e-learning-course for information skills of the University Library now also available in English …

Social Media

Connect with Us: