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Jonathan Davies

Contemplative Studies Centre, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.

2 papers in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Real-World Meditation App Engagement: Longitudinal Study of the Medito Meditation App.

JMIR mHealth and uHealth June 8, 2026 Julia Adams, Jonathan Davies, Prai Wattanatakulchat et al.

Meditation app use is generally low: half of users engage for 16 minutes or less in the first month after download, and fewer than 20% continue past 14 days. Intended use far exceeds actual use. Higher engagement is associated with expectation match, expectations for anxiety and attention, conscientiousness, satisfaction with life, and well-being, while neuroticism, perceived stress, psychological distress, and lower quality of life are linked to lower engagement. Readiness to change uniquely predicts higher engagement. Acute stress motivates use, but chronic stress disrupts it. Engagement is best when experiences match expectations and users are prepared to change.

Engagement With Meditation Apps: Cross-Sectional Survey of Use and Associations.

Journal of medical Internet research February 2, 2026 Julia Adams, Jonathan Davies, Prai Wattanatakulchat et al.

Most people who download meditation apps use them very little. In a survey of 536 recent users across five English-speaking countries, those who were more educated, more open to new experiences, and who held stronger beliefs that meditation apps would help them were more likely to engage regularly. Readiness to change, expectations for sleep and thriving, and perceived app quality and appeal were also linked to greater use. Age and higher education were among the strongest predictors of engagement. The findings suggest that user characteristics and attitudes toward the app matter more than mental health symptoms for determining how much someone uses a meditation app.