The (In)flexible self: Psychopathology, mindfulness, and neuroscience.
Fabio Giommi, Prisca R Bauer, Aviva Berkovich-Ohana, Henk Barendregt, Kirk Warren Brown, Shaun Gallagher, Ivan Nyklíček, Brian Ostafin, Antonino Raffone, Heleen A Slagter, Fynn-mathis Trautwein, David R Vago
International journal of clinical and health psychology : IJCHP January 1, 2023 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1016/j.ijchp.2023.100381 via PubMed
Summary
Transdiagnostic processes, particularly rigidity, are key to understanding psychopathological symptoms. Mindfulness-Based Interventions (MBIs) have shown promise in reducing rigidity and improving mental health. These interventions target transdiagnostic symptoms and may alter both individual aspects of the self and the overall self-pattern. The pattern theory of self (PTS) provides a framework for understanding how mindfulness can facilitate these changes, supported by neuroscientific evidence linking self-experience to cortical networks.
Study at a glance
| Design | review |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Mindfulness-Based Interventions are effective in targeting transdiagnostic symptoms and may help decrease rigidity related to psychopathological processes. |
Abstract
Clinical and neuroscientific evidence indicates that transdiagnostic processes contribute to the generation and maintenance of psychopathological symptoms and disorders. Rigidity (inflexibility) appears a core feature of most transdiagnostic pathological processes. Decreasing rigidity may prove important to restore and maintain mental health. One of the primary domains in which rigidity and flexibility plays a role concerns the self. We adopt the pattern theory of self (PTS) for a working definition of self. This incorporates the pluralist view on self as constituted by multiple aspects or processes, understood to constitute a self-pattern, i.e. processes organized in non-linear dynamical relations across a number of time scales. The use of mindfulness meditation in the format of Mindfulness Based Interventions (MBIs) has been developed over four decades in Clinical Psychology. MBIs are promising as evidence-based treatments, shown to be equivalent to gold-standard treatments and superior to specific active controls in several randomized controlled trials. Notably, MBIs have been shown to target transdiagnostic symptoms. Given the hypothesized central role of rigid, habitual self-patterns in psychopathology, PTS offers a useful frame to understand how mindfulness may be beneficial in decreasing inflexibility. We discuss the evidence that mindfulness can alter the psychological and behavioral expression of individual aspects of the self-pattern, as well as favour change in the self-pattern as a whole gestalt. We discuss neuroscientific research on how the phenomenology of the self (pattern) is reflected in associated cortical networks and meditation-related alterations in cortical networks. Creating a synergy between these two aspects can increase understanding of psychopathological processes and improve diagnostic and therapeutic options.