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Helen Y. Weng

2 papers in the library · 2 citations · publishing 2019-2025

Papers

Still facial photographs of long-term meditators are perceived by naïve observers as less neurotic, more conscientious and more mindful than non-meditating controls

PLoS ONE August 28, 2019 Simon B. Goldberg, Matthew J. Hirshberg, Lawrence Y. Tello et al. 2 citations

Long-term meditators are perceived by observers as less neurotic and more conscientious, mindful, and comfortable in their own skin than meditation-naïve individuals, based solely on ratings of still photographs. These differences were not explained by age, gender, race/ethnicity, body mass index, or attractiveness. No such differences were observed after an eight-week mindfulness meditation course, an active control program, or a waitlist period, suggesting that observable facial cues linked to meditation may require extensive training to emerge.

"May we be the bridge and boat to cross the water": Community-engaged research on metta meditation.

Am J Orthopsychiatry January 9, 2025 Ariana Thompson-Lastad, Shah Noor Hussein, Jessica M. Harrison et al.

A community-based loving-kindness meditation program helped diverse LGBTQ+ adults build belonging, compassion, and resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants reported that the practice supported them in coping with both personal stressors and structural oppression. Three main themes emerged: the community of practice fostered belonging; metta meditation cultivated compassion and equanimity; and the practice helped navigate harmful situations. The findings suggest that community spaces designed for belonging can connect contemplative practice with social change efforts.