Among 139 Chinese Pure Land and Chan Buddhist monastics, the common facets of mysticism identified by Stace and measured by Hood's Mysticism Scale successfully described Buddhist experience, though modified by Buddhist doctrines. Confirmatory factor analysis showed that Stace's three-factor structure fit the data, but the hypothesized separation between introvertive and extrovertive unity converged in this Chinese Buddhist context. These results strongly support the idea that mystical experience has a common experiential core across religious traditions and that this core can be studied with mixed methods.
During the COVID-19 outbreak, a two-wave survey of 342 Chinese college students found that higher levels of the personality trait mindfulness were associated with lower intentions to panic buy. This relationship was explained by two sequential mediators: mindfulness reduced feelings of social alienation, which in turn lowered death anxiety, and both factors together curbed panic buying. The findings suggest that mindfulness may help mitigate panic buying during health crises.