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Daniel Pinazo

Department of Evolutionary, Educational and Social Psychology and Methodology, Universitat Jaume I, Castellón de la Plana, Spain.

2 papers in the library · 293 citations · publishing 2016-2023

Papers

State and Training Effects of Mindfulness Meditation on Brain Networks Reflect Neuronal Mechanisms of Its Antidepressant Effect

Neural Plasticity January 1, 2016 Chuan-Chih Yang, Alfonso Barrós‐loscertales, Daniel Pinazo et al. 284 citations

Forty days of mindfulness meditation training in 13 novice meditators altered functional connectivity in brain networks linked to self-referential thought and emotion regulation. During meditation, internal consistency increased in the precuneus and temporoparietal junction but decreased in frontal regions, and connectivity between the dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and anterior insula was reduced. After training, resting-state connectivity between the pregenual anterior cingulate and dorsomedial prefrontal cortex decreased. Participants also reported significantly reduced depression and anxiety scores. These results suggest that meditation may produce antidepressant effects through neuroplastic changes in brain networks underlying affective disorders.

The Toronto Mindfulness Scale and the State Mindfulness Scale: psychometric properties of the Spanish versions.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2023 Jaime Navarrete, Marta Fontana-Mcnally, Ariadna Colomer-Carbonell et al. 9 citations

The Spanish versions of the Toronto Mindfulness Scale (TMS) and the State Mindfulness Scale (SMS) show adequate reliability and validity for measuring state mindfulness, though the SMS specific factors have poor reliability when controlling for the general factor. Data from six non-clinical Spanish samples (TMS n=119, SMS n=223) were analyzed using confirmatory factor analysis. The best-fitting model for the TMS was a correlated two-factor structure (curiosity and decentering). For the SMS, a bifactor structure (general factor, mindfulness of body, and mindfulness of mind) fit best. Both scales detected changes in state mindfulness after meditation practices. The patterns of correlations with measures of trait mindfulness, decentering, non-attachment, depression, anxiety, stress, affect, self-criticism, and self-reassurance were mostly as expected.