Jewish meditation can refer to several traditional practices, ranging from visualization and intuitive methods, forms of emotional insight in communitive prayer, esoteric combinations of Divine names, to intellectual analysis of philosophical, ethical or mystical concepts. It often accompanies unstructured, personal Jewish prayer that can allow isolated contemplation, and underlies the instituted
Jewish services. Its elevated psychological insights can give birth to
dveikus (cleaving to God), particularly in Jewish mysticism. The accurate traditional Hebrew term for meditation is
Hitbodedut/Hisbodedus (literally self "seclusion"), while the more limited term
Hitbonenut/Hisbonenus ("contemplation") describes the conceptually directed intellectual method of meditation.