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Journal of counseling psychology

ISSN 0022-0167

3 papers in the library · 86 citations · publishing 2015-2025

Papers

Development of the Sources of Spirituality Scale.

Journal of counseling psychology July 1, 2015 Don E Davis, Kenneth Rice, Joshua N Hook et al. 72 citations

Spirituality can involve a sense of closeness or connection with a theistic being, the transcendent, oneself, humanity, or nature, not just religious forms. Across four studies, the Sources of Spirituality (SOS) Scale was developed and validated to measure these distinct elements. Factor structure was consistent across undergraduate and community adult samples. Construct validity was supported by associations with religious commitment, attitudes toward the Sacred, and connection with nature. Latent profile analysis revealed five distinct patterns of spirituality based on the SOS subscales. The findings have implications for therapy and models of spirituality.

How often should I meditate? A randomized trial examining the role of meditation frequency when total amount of meditation is held constant.

Journal of counseling psychology March 1, 2024 Kevin M Riordan, Otto Simonsson, Corrina Frye et al. 12 citations

A two-week compassion-based meditation program delivered via the Healthy Minds Program app was tested in undergraduates with elevated depression or anxiety (N=351). Participants were randomly assigned to either one 20-minute meditation per day or two 10-minute meditations per day. Both groups showed improvements in psychological distress, experiential avoidance, fear of missing out, loneliness, and self-compassion from before to after the intervention, and daily distress and loneliness also improved over time. No significant differences were found between the two dosing schedules on any measure. When total daily meditation time is equal, distributing practice into shorter sessions does not affect outcomes for distressed beginners.

Effect of cognitive flexibility in mindfulness intervention for emotional distress: Two randomized controlled trials.

Journal of counseling psychology July 14, 2025 Zhenzhen Wang, Mo Chen, Amy Hu et al. 2 citations

Two randomized controlled trials tested whether cognitive flexibility—the ability to shift attention—explains how a mindfulness intervention reduces emotional distress. In Study 1, 607 highly distressed adults were assigned to an eight-week mindfulness program or a waitlist. In Study 2, 89 similar participants were assigned to the program or a control group. Both trials showed that the mindfulness program significantly improved anxiety, depression, and general distress. Changes in cognitive flexibility during the intervention statistically mediated later reductions in emotional distress. Specifically, shifting attention away from affective to nonaffective aspects of positive stimuli at week 5, and less shifting from negative to positive affective aspects at week 3, predicted greater distress relief at week 7. The findings indicate cognitive flexibility is a key mechanism of mindfulness-based intervention for emotional distress.