“…While the effects of meditation practice on cognitive processes, such as memory (Jha, Stanley, Kiyonaga, Wong, & Gelfand, ; van Vugt & Jha, ) and attention (Hodgins & Adair, ; Jha et al, ; Lutz et al, ), have been widely investigated, only a few studies have looked at the effect of meditation on perception of time (Ataria, Dor‐Ziderman, & Berkovich‐Ohana, ; Berkovich‐Ohana, Glicksohn, & Goldstein, ; Droit‐Volet, Chaulet, & Dambrun, ; Droit‐Volet, Fanget, & Dambrun, ; Kramer, Weger, & Sharma, ; Schotz et al, ; Thones & Wittmann, ; Wittmann et al, ; Wittmann & Schmidt, ). These include studies on the phenomenology of temporal experience (Ataria et al, ; Berkovich‐Ohana, Dor‐Ziderman, Glicksohn, & Goldstein, ) and time perception measured using psychophysical tasks (Schotz et al, ; Wittmann et al, ). In terms of phenomenology, Ataria et al () studied sense of boundaries for multiple aspects, including the sense of time, with an advanced meditation expert who moved through three different stages, namely the default state, dissolving of the sense of boundaries, and disappearance of the sense of boundaries.…”