Empirically supported benefits of mindfulness
The term “mindfulness” has been used to refer to a
psychological state of awareness, the practices that promote this
awareness, a mode of processing information and a character
trait. To be consistent with most of the research reviewed in
this article, we define mindfulness as a moment-to-moment
awareness of one’s experience without judgment. In this
sense, mindfulness is a state and not a trait. While it might be
promoted by certain practices or activities, such as meditation,
it is not equivalent to or synonymous with them.
Several disciplines and practices can cultivate mindfulness,
such as yoga, tai chi and qigong, but most of the literature has
focused on mindfulness that is developed through mindfulness
meditation — those self-regulation practices that focus on
training attention and awareness in order to bring mental
processes under greater voluntary control and thereby foster
general mental well-being and development and/or specific
capacities such as calmness, clarity and concentration (Walsh &
Shapiro, 2006).
Researchers theorize that mindfulness meditation
promotes metacognitive awareness, decreases rumination via
disengagement from perseverative cognitive activities and
enhances attentional capacities through gains in working
memory. These cognitive gains, in turn, contribute to effective
emotion-regulation strategies.
More specifically, research on mindfulness has identified
these benefits:
Reduced rumination. Several studies have shown that
mindfulness reduces rumination. In one study, for example,
Chambers et al. (2008) asked 20 novice meditators to
participate in a 10-day intensive mindfulness meditation retreat.
After the retreat, the meditation group had significantly higher
self-reported mindfulness and a decreased negative affect
compared with a control group. They also experienced fewer
depressive symptoms and less rumination. In addition, the
meditators had significantly better working memory capacity
and were better able to sustain attention during a performance
task compared with the control group.
Stress reduction. Many studies show that practicing
mindfulness reduces stress. In 2010, Hoffman et al. conducted
a meta-analysis of 39 studies that explored the use of
mindfulness-based stress reduction and mindfulness-based
cognitive therapy. The researchers concluded that mindfulness-based therapy may be useful in altering affective and cognitive
processes that underlie multiple clinical issues.
Those findings are consistent with evidence that mindfulness
meditation increases positive affect and decreases anxiety and
negative affect. In one study, participants randomly assigned
to an eight-week mindfulness-based stress reduction group
were compared with controls on self-reported measures of
depression, anxiety and psychopathology, and on neural
reactivity as measured by fMRI after watching sad films (Farb
et al., 2010). The researchers found that the participants
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who experienced mindfulness-based stress reduction had
significantly less anxiety, depression and somatic distress
compared with the control group. In addition, the fMRI data
indicated that the mindfulness group had less neural reactivity
when they were exposed to the films than the control group,
and they displayed distinctly different neural responses while
watching the films than they did before their mindfulness
training. These findings suggest that mindfulness meditation
shifts people’s ability to use emotion regulation strategies in a
way that enables them to experience emotion selectively, and
that the emotions they experience may be processed differently
in the brain (Farb et al., 2010; Williams, 2010).
Boosts to working memory. Improvements to working
memory appear to be another benefit of mindfulness,
research finds. A 2010 study by Jha et al., for example,
documented the benefits of mindfulness meditation
among a military group who participated in an eight-week
mindfulness training, a nonmeditating military group and
a group of nonmeditating civilians. Both military groups
were in a highly stressful period before deployment. The
researchers found that the nonmeditating military group
had decreased working memory capacity over time, whereas
working memory capacity among nonmeditating civilians
was stable across time. Within the meditating military
group, however, working memory capacity increased with
meditation practice. In addition, meditation practice was
directly related to self-reported positive affect and inversely
related to self-reported negative affect.
Focus. Another study examined how mindfulness
meditation affected participants’ ability to focus attention
and suppress distracting information. The researchers
compared a group of experienced mindfulness meditators
with a control group that had no meditation experience.
They found that the meditation group had significantly better
performance on all measures of attention and had higher
self-reported mindfulness. Mindfulness meditation practice
and self-reported mindfulness were correlated directly with
cognitive flexibility and attentional functioning (Moore and
Malinowski, 2009).
Less emotional reactivity. Research also supports the notion
that mindfulness meditation decreases emotional reactivity.
In a study of people who had anywhere from one month to 29
years of mindfulness meditation practice, researchers found
that mindfulness meditation practice helped people disengage
from emotionally upsetting pictures and enabled them to focus
better on a cognitive task as compared with people who saw the
pictures but did not meditate (Ortner et al., 2007).
More cognitive flexibility. Another line of research
suggests that in addition to helping people become less
reactive, mindfulness meditation may also give them greater
cognitive flexibility. One study found that people who practice
mindfulness meditation appear to develop the skill of self-observation, which neurologically disengages the automatic
MONITOR ON PSYCHOLOGY • JULY/AUGUST 2012