| Literature DB >> 26170728 |
Abstract
In the last few decades, mindfulness meditation has gained prominence as an adjunctive psychotherapeutic technique. In fact, a vast literature of controlled studies has found that mindfulness meditation is related to improved mental health across a variety of disorders. Elucidating the components involved in mindfulness meditation's positive impact on psychological well-being is an important step in more precisely identifying the populations that would most benefit from its therapeutic utilization. Yet, a consensus regarding the particular underlying mechanisms that contribute to these outcomes is very much limited. There are many reasons for this, including the inconsistent operationalization and use of mindfulness meditation across research investigations. Despite the elusive mechanisms, many studies seem to indicate that cultivating different aspects of attention is a feasible, consistent, and parsimonious starting point bridging mindfulness practice and psychological well-being. Attention in itself is a complex construct. It comprises different networks, including alerting, orienting, and executive attention, and is also explained in terms of the way it is regulated. This paper supports a previously suggested idea that cultivating all aspects of attention through mindfulness meditation leads to greater psychological well-being through decreased ruminative processes. Ruminative processes are decreased by engaging in both focused and receptive attention, which foster the ability to distract and decenter.Entities:
Keywords: attention; mindfulness; psychological well-being; rumination
Year: 2015 PMID: 26170728 PMCID: PMC4492627 DOI: 10.2147/PRBM.S31458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Res Behav Manag ISSN: 1179-1578
Proposed components of mindfulness meditation
| Author(s) | Proposed components of mindfulness meditation | Direct attentional component? |
|---|---|---|
| Kabat-Zinn | 1. Attentional skills and | ☑ |
| Brown and Ryan | 1. Attention to and awareness of moment-to-moment experience | ☑ |
| Bishop et al | 1. Paying attention to the here and now | ☑ |
| Shapiro et al | 1. Intention | ☑ |
| Baer et al | 1. Observing (attending to internal and external stimuli) | ☑ |
| Hölzel et al | 1. Attention regulation | ☑ |
| Farb et al | 1. Attention to present-moment sensation | ☑ |
| Vago and Silbersweig | 1. Intention and motivation | ☑ |
Attention networks
| Attention networks | Also known as | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Alerting | Vigilance, sustained attention | The ability to maintain attention over long periods of time |
| Orienting | Selective attention, divided attention | The ability to limit attention to a subset of possible sensory inputs |
| Executive attention | Conflict monitoring, attention switching | The ability to prioritize attention in the context of competing cognitive demands |
Executive attention components
| Executive attention | Also known as | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Cognitive flexibility | Set-shifting | The ability to shift from one thought to another and/or to have multiple thoughts in mind at one time |
| Self-regulation | Self-control, willpower | The ability to monitor and modulate cognition, emotion, and behavior |
| Metacognitive awareness | Decentering, reperceiving | The ability to shift perspective from the subjective to the objective nature of a thought |
Attention regulation styles in mindfulness meditation
| Types of attention in meditation | Also known as | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Focused attention | Concentrative meditation | Attention is restricted to a specific chosen sensory input. Attention is ideally sustained, but focused attention also enables redirecting attention back to the original focus |
| Receptive attention | Open monitoring (OM) | Attention is receptive to the entire field of awareness. OM practices are characterized by distributed attention and nonjudgmental awareness |