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Enzo Pasquale Scilingo

School of Engineering, Research Center, University of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.

3 papers in the library · 13 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Exploring the Effects of Variety and Amount of Mindfulness Practices on Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Symptoms: Longitudinal Study on a Mental Health-Focused eHealth System for Patients With Breast or Prostate Cancer.

JMIR mental health November 21, 2024 Francesca Malandrone, Sara Urru, Paola Berchialla et al. 8 citations

Patients with cancer who engaged in a wider variety of internet-based mindfulness practices experienced greater reductions in depression, anxiety, and stress than those who practiced more frequently but with less variety. Among 107 patients (68 women with breast cancer, 38 men with prostate cancer), a high correlation (0.94) was found between diverse and sustained mindfulness practices and symptom reduction. Male, married, and highly educated patients were more likely to engage in mindfulness. Dispositional mindfulness and self-compassion did not affect how much or how diversely patients practiced, but higher baseline levels of these traits were associated with larger reductions in psychological distress. The variety of practice, not just the amount, appears crucial for symptom relief.

Sniffing out a solution: How emotional body odors can improve mindfulness therapy for social anxiety.

Journal of affective disorders January 15, 2025 Cinzia Cecchetto, Elisa Dal Bò, Emma T Eliasson et al. 5 citations

Exposure to human body odors (BOs) from happiness or fear, compared to clean air, reduced self-reported anxiety during mindfulness practice over two days in women with social anxiety symptoms. However, fear BO exposure also decreased heart rate variability, indicating a less physiologically relaxed state. No differences in skin conductance were found. The findings suggest that emotional BOs create a sense of social presence, potentially enhancing the ecological validity of psychological treatments, and may eventually be used to augment existing therapies.

Analytical meditation improves physiological well-being in expert practitioners: a study on central and peripheral neurophysiological correlates

bioRxiv Preprint Server December 8, 2025 Alejandro Luis Callara, Mohammad Hadi Azarabad, Laura Sebastiani et al. preprint

Advanced meditation in experienced Tibetan monks produces a unique psychophysiological state of relaxed-vigilance, characterized by enhanced parasympathetic tone, decreased respiratory rate, and gradually increasing electrodermal activity—indicating simultaneous calm and alertness. EEG recordings showed elevated gamma-band power during analytical meditations. These findings suggest that advanced meditative practices foster an adaptive integration of autonomic and cortical responses, supporting well-being and cognitive flexibility.