Perspectives on Psychological Science
October 14, 2011
2,997 citations
Mindfulness meditation, the nonjudgmental awareness of present-moment experiences, improves well-being and reduces psychiatric and stress-related symptoms, leading to its integration into psychotherapeutic interventions. Despite a surge in publications, few theoretical reviews synthesize the literature into a comprehensive framework. This article explores four components through which mindfulness exerts its effects: attention regulation, body awareness, emotion regulation (including reappraisal, exposure, extinction, and reconsolidation), and a change in perspective on the self. Empirical research, including self-reports and experimental data, supports these mechanisms. Neuroimaging studies show mindfulness practice is associated with neuroplastic changes in the anterior cingulate cortex, insula, temporo-parietal junction, fronto-limbic network, and default mode network. The authors suggest these components work synergistically to enhance self-regulation, guiding future research and treatment development.
Perspectives on Psychological Science
October 10, 2017
1,500 citations
Mindfulness meditation has become widely used in therapy, corporate wellness, education, and the military, but the research backing it has faced criticism for poor methodology and misinformation. This article reviews the current state of mindfulness research, discussing difficulties in defining mindfulness, the proper scope of studies, and key methodological issues. The authors summarize what is known and unknown, offering a prescriptive agenda for contemplative science that focuses on assessment, training, possible adverse effects, and brain imaging. The goal is to inform scientists, media, and the public, minimize harm, curb poor research practices, and stop the spread of misinformation about mindfulness's benefits, costs, and future.
Perspectives on Psychological Science
August 22, 2022
141 citations
Awe—an emotion often considered ineffable—promotes mental and physical health by engaging five processes: shifts in neurophysiology, diminished self-focus, increased prosocial relationality, greater social integration, and a heightened sense of meaning. Experiences of awe arising in nature, spirituality, music, collective movement, and psychedelics strengthen the mind and body through these pathways.
Perspectives on Psychological Science
February 13, 2020
Ann Taves
127 citations
Experiences often labeled 'mystical' may not be a unique, special category but rather a form of ego dissolution—an alteration in the sense of self—similar to changes induced by psychoactive drugs and meditation. The idea that mystical experiences are sui generis rests on two self-report scales that operationalize a metaphysically untestable construct. To better understand unusual experiences across disciplines and cultures, new self-report measures are needed that separate generic descriptions of experiences from how individuals appraise their valence, significance, cause, and long-term effects.