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Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

ISSN 0022-3514

5 papers in the library · 16,229 citations · publishing 1989-2021

Papers

The benefits of being present: Mindfulness and its role in psychological well-being.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology January 1, 2003 13,338 citations

Mindfulness, an attribute of consciousness, is linked to well-being. The Mindful Attention Awareness Scale (MAAS) was developed and validated to measure dispositional mindfulness. Studies show the MAAS captures a unique quality of consciousness related to well-being, distinguishes mindfulness practitioners, and is associated with enhanced self-awareness. An experience-sampling study found that both dispositional and state mindfulness predict self-regulated behavior and positive emotional states. In a clinical intervention with cancer patients, increases in mindfulness over time corresponded with declines in mood disturbance and stress.

Open hearts build lives: Positive emotions, induced through loving-kindness meditation, build consequential personal resources.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology October 27, 2008 Barbara L. Fredrickson, Michael Cohn, Kimberly A. Coffey et al. 2,359 citations

Daily experiences of positive emotions can compound over time to build personal resources that enhance well-being. In a field experiment with 139 working adults, half were randomly assigned to practice loving-kindness meditation. This meditation increased daily positive emotions, which led to growth in mindfulness, purpose in life, social support, and fewer illness symptoms. These gains then predicted greater life satisfaction and reduced depressive symptoms. The findings suggest that loving-kindness meditation generates positive emotions in a way that counteracts the hedonic treadmill, making it an effective intervention for building psychological resources.

Transcendental Meditation, mindfulness, and longevity: An experimental study with the elderly.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology January 1, 1989 297 citations

Practicing the Transcendental Meditation (TM) program may improve cognitive function, mental health, and blood pressure in elderly adults, while also increasing survival rates. In a study of 73 residents of homes for the elderly (average age 81), those randomly assigned to TM showed the greatest improvement in learning, cognitive flexibility, mental health, systolic blood pressure, and ratings of behavior and aging, compared to mindfulness training, relaxation, or no treatment. The mindfulness group improved most on perceived control and word fluency. After three years, survival was 100% for the TM group and 87.5% for mindfulness, versus lower rates in the other groups.

Awe motivates authentic-self pursuit via self-transcendence: Implications for prosociality.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology December 2, 2021 Tonglin Jiang, Constantine Sedikides 166 citations

Awe, an emotion experienced when encountering something vast and beyond one's current understanding, can prompt people to pursue their authentic selves. This pursuit of an authentic self was associated with higher general prosocial behavior, but lower inauthentic prosocial behavior, based on a sample of 868 participants. The findings suggest that awe's relationship with the self is complex and nuanced, inviting further examination.

Mindfulness meditation reduces guilt and prosocial reparation.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology December 23, 2021 Andrew Hafenbrack, Matthew L. Lapalme, Isabelle Solal 69 citations

Across five experiments with over 1,400 participants, focused-breathing meditation that cultivates state mindfulness reduces the desire to make amends after a transgression. Induced mindfulness lowered feelings of guilt and weakened the link between wrongdoing and reparative actions. In contrast, loving-kindness meditation increased prosocial reparation by boosting other-focus and feelings of love. The findings suggest that different meditation practices have distinct effects on prosocial behavior.