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Agathe Joret Philippe

2 papers in the library · 2 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Meditation dosage predicts self- and teacher-perceived responsiveness to an 18-month randomised controlled trial

Scientific Reports November 2, 2024 Marco Schlosser, Julie Gonneaud, Stefano Poletti et al. 2 citations

Older adults who spent more time practicing meditation perceived greater benefits from an 18-month meditation program. The study involved 90 healthy adults aged 65-84 years who were randomly assigned to either meditation training or a non-native language training. Higher levels of formal practice were associated with higher combined ratings of self- and teacher-perceived responsiveness across measures of connection, emotions, and meta-awareness during sessions and in daily life. Global responsiveness scores were not correlated with actual changes in well-being. The findings suggest that engagement, rather than baseline characteristics like personality or expectancy, predicts perceived response to meditation training.

Examining cognitive differences in expert meditators and non-meditators older adults.

Scientific reports May 15, 2025 Florence Requier, Hamed Mohammadi, Harriet Demnitz-King et al.

Expert meditators in older age reported less external distraction and performed better on memory tasks compared to non-meditators, while no differences were found in attention, executive function, or global cognitive scores. These cross-sectional findings from 135 non-meditators and 27 expert meditators suggest that prolonged meditation practice may help preserve memory and manage distractions, two cognitive capacities important for healthy aging.