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James Carmody

Deparment of Population Health and Medicine, University of Massachusetts Chan Medical School, Worcester, MA, United States.

2 papers in the library · 6,269 citations · publishing 2004-2025

Papers

Mindfulness: A proposed operational definition.

Clinical Psychology Science and Practice January 1, 2004 Scott R. Bishop, Mark A. Lau, Shauna L. Shapiro et al. 6,266 citations

Mindfulness has attracted considerable interest as a way to reduce cognitive vulnerability to stress and emotional distress, but it has not been defined operationally. Recent consensus meetings produced a two-component model of mindfulness, specifying each component in terms of specific behaviors, experiential manifestations, and psychological processes. The paper addresses temporal stability and situational specificity, speculates on the conceptual and operational distinctiveness of mindfulness, and discusses implications for instrument development and measurement.

Treatment mechanism and outcome decoupling effects in cognitive therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction, and behavior therapy for chronic pain.

Pain February 1, 2025 James Gerhart, John W Burns, Beverly Thorn et al. 3 citations

For chronic low back pain, cognitive therapy, mindfulness-based stress reduction, and behavior therapy all appear to work by progressively weakening the link between pain-related thoughts or pain spikes and later outcomes, rather than by directly changing those mechanisms. In a study of 521 people, associations between treatment mechanism variables and outcomes were strong early in treatment but became nonsignificant by the final third. This decoupling effect was similar across the three active treatments but did not occur in treatment as usual. The findings suggest that by midtreatment, participants may learn that maladaptive thoughts or pain increases need not worsen their subsequent experience.