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Alberto Barceló-soler

Research Network on Chronicity, Primary Care and Health Promotion (RICAPPS), Zaragoza, Spain.

2 papers in the library · 3 citations · publishing 2022-2026

Papers

Examining the Relation Between Practicing Meditation and Having Peak Experiences and Lucid Dreams. A Cross-Sectional Study.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2022 Javier Garcia-Campayo, Rinchen Hijar-Aguinaga, Alberto Barceló-soler et al. 3 citations

People who meditate are more likely to report having had a peak experience—an intense moment of joy, unity, or transcendence—than those who do not meditate. In a survey of 237 Spanish adults, 71.8% of meditators reported at least one peak experience compared to 46.8% of non-meditators. However, among those who had such experiences, the number, intensity, and ability to self-induce them did not differ between the two groups. Meditators also scored higher on measures of non-dual awareness, mindfulness, and absorption, but not on all aspects of dream lucidity. Being a meditator predicted having had a peak experience but not lucid dreaming scores, suggesting meditation may facilitate peak experiences while its effect on lucid dreams remains unclear.

Effectiveness of Deconstructive Meditative Practices in Improving Mental Health and Well-being: A Systematic Review

Mindfulness March 27, 2026 Paulina Lamas-Morales, Carlos García-rubio, María Beltrán-ruiz et al.

A systematic review of 18 studies (2457 participants) found that deconstructive meditative practices, such as Vipassana and insight meditation, may improve depression, anxiety, stress, and psychological well-being in adults. Mindfulness, non-attachment, and insight were identified as possible mechanisms of change. Results varied by study design and intervention duration, and the limited number of randomized controlled trials and methodological heterogeneity restrict generalizability. The evidence suggests these practices can be effective, but higher-quality studies are needed to confirm clinical applications.