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Lionel Dany

LPS, Aix Marseille Univ, Aix-en-Provence, France.

2 papers in the library · 3 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Mindfulness in Psychosocial Research: An Integrative Literature Review of What is Studied and How

International Review of Social Psychology January 1, 2025 Philippine Chachignon, Emmanuelle Le Barbenchon, Lionel Dany 2 citations

An integrative review of 109 papers on mindfulness from a social-psychological perspective found that most research focuses on well-being, social relationships, health, and organizations. Only 21 references were grounded in theory, with 42% of those being social psychology theories. Studies were mostly correlational (46%) or experimental (47%) and used quantitative methods. Mindfulness effects were primarily beneficial, emphasizing emotion regulation and stress management at individual and interpersonal levels, while group or ideological contexts received less attention. The review argues that research predominantly uses Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic samples, often ignoring socioeconomic backgrounds, and adopts a positivist, micro-level focus that overlooks broader macro-social dimensions.

Exploratory study of the effects of multi-site mindfulness interventions on the multifaceted self as a psychosocial indicator of mental health: A pilot study.

Acta psychologica May 1, 2025 Philippine Chachignon, Emmanuelle Le Barbenchon, Lionel Dany et al. 1 citation

People without mental health conditions tend to see themselves as having a more complex and positive personality than others, combining opposing positive traits. In contrast, individuals with depression see themselves as more complex in negative traits, lacking self-enhancing strategies linked to psychological health. In a study of 24 participants with depression and anxiety disorders who completed an 8-week mindfulness-based intervention, measures of trait mindfulness, anxiety, depression, and self-compassion all improved. Participants showed reduced self-negativity and a more positive view of others, though they still viewed themselves more negatively than others. The multifaceted self concept offers a useful approach for assessing mental health changes in mindfulness interventions.