| Literature DB >> 29438869 |
Freddie Lymeus1, Per Lindberg2, Terry Hartig3.
Abstract
Mindfulness courses conventionally use effortful, focused meditation to train attention. In contrast, natural settings can effortlessly support state mindfulness and restore depleted attention resources, which could facilitate meditation. We performed two studies that compared conventional training with restoration skills training (ReST) that taught low-effort open monitoring meditation in a garden over five weeks. Assessments before and after meditation on multiple occasions showed that ReST meditation increasingly enhanced attention performance. Conventional meditation enhanced attention initially but increasingly incurred effort, reflected in performance decrements toward the course end. With both courses, attentional improvements generalized in the first weeks of training. Against established accounts, the generalized improvements thus occurred before any effort was incurred by the conventional exercises. We propose that restoration rather than attention training can account for early attentional improvements with meditation. ReST holds promise as an undemanding introduction to mindfulness and as a method to enhance restoration in nature contacts.Keywords: Attention; Meditation; Mindfulness; Restoration; Training
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29438869 DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2018.01.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Conscious Cogn ISSN: 1053-8100