Skip to content

Rachel Hoel

2 papers in the library · 69 citations · publishing 2021-2022

Papers

Absence of structural brain changes from mindfulness-based stress reduction: Two combined randomized controlled trials

Science Advances May 20, 2022 Tammi R. A. Kral, Kaley Davis, Cole Korponay et al. 67 citations

A large, rigorously controlled study failed to find evidence that an 8-week mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) course changes brain structure. Combining data from two randomized controlled trials with 218 meditation-naïve participants, the study compared MBSR to an active control and a waitlist group. Using structural MRI scans before and after the intervention, researchers assessed gray matter volume, gray matter density, and cortical thickness. No neuroplastic changes were observed in the MBSR group compared to either control group, either across the whole brain or in regions previously reported to change. This contradicts widely referenced earlier claims that MBSR alters brain structure.

Non-replication of structural brain changes from Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction: Two combined randomized controlled trials

medRxiv June 16, 2021 Tammi R. A. Kral, Kaley Davis, Cole Korponay et al. 2 citations preprint

A large, rigorously controlled study combining data from two three-arm randomized controlled trials found no evidence that an eight-week Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) course produces changes in brain structure. Meditation-naive participants (218 total) were randomly assigned to a waitlist, an 8-week MBSR program, or a validated active control group. Structural MRI scans taken before and after the intervention showed no significant differences in gray matter volume, gray matter density, or cortical thickness between MBSR and either control group, at either the whole-brain level or in brain regions previously linked to MBSR. These results fail to replicate earlier, widely cited claims of MBSR-induced neuroplasticity.