Divergent effects of brief contemplative practices in response to an acute stressor: A randomized controlled trial of brief breath awareness, loving-kindness, gratitude or an attention control practice
M. Hirshberg, Simon B. Goldberg, S. Schaefer, Lisa Flook, David Findley, R. Davidson
PLoS ONE December 12, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207765 via Semantic Scholar
Summary
Gratitude training boosted positive affect more than breath awareness, but it also increased emotional reactivity to a stressor, making participants find a cold pressor test more aversive and raising negative affect more than other practices. Loving-kindness practice reduced implicit negative affect compared to a control. After gratitude training, greater gains in implicit positive affect predicted lower likability ratings of neutral faces, and the gratitude group was less likely to donate time than the loving-kindness group. Different brief contemplative practices produce distinct effects, especially under stress.
Study at a glance
| Design | randomized controlled trial |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 156 |
| Population | undergraduates |
| Key finding | Gratitude training improved positive affect but increased stress reactivity, while loving-kindness reduced implicit negative affect, showing that different contemplative practices have distinct effects. |
Abstract
Mindfulness practices are increasingly being utilized as a method for cultivating well-being. The term mindfulness is often used as an umbrella for a variety of different practices and many mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) contain multiple styles of practice. Despite the diversity of practices within MBIs, few studies have investigated whether constituent practices produce specific effects. We randomized 156 undergraduates to one of four brief practices: breath awareness, loving-kindness, gratitude, or to an attention control condition. We assessed practice effects on affect following brief training, and effects on affect and behavior after provocation with a stressor (i.e., Cold pressor test). Results indicate that gratitude training significantly improved positive affect compared to breath awareness (d = 0.58) and loving-kindness led to significantly greater reductions in implicit negative affect compared to the control condition (d = 0.59) immediately after brief practice. In spite of gains in positive affect, the gratitude group demonstrated increased reactivity to the stressor, reporting the CPT as significantly more aversive than the control condition (d = 0.46) and showing significantly greater increases in negative affect compared to the breath awareness, loving-kindness, and control groups (ds = 0.55, 0.60, 0.65, respectively). Greater gains in implicit positive affect following gratitude training predicted decreased post-stressor likability ratings of novel neutral faces compared to breath awareness, loving-kindness, and control groups (ds = - 0.39, -0.40, -0.33, respectively) as well. Moreover, the gratitude group was significantly less likely to donate time than the loving-kindness group in an ecologically valid opportunity to provide unrewarded support. These data suggest that different styles of contemplative practice may produce different effects in the context of brief, introductory practice and these differences may be heightened by stress. Implications for the study of contemplative practices are discussed.