| Literature DB >> 32300129 |
Sage K Iwamoto1,2, Marcus Alexander3, Mark Torres3, Michael R Irwin4, Nicholas A Christakis3,5, Akihiro Nishi6.
Abstract
Clinical evidence suggests that mindfulness meditation reduces anxiety, depression, and stress, and improves emotion regulation due to modulation of activity in neural substrates linked to the regulation of emotions and social preferences. However, less was known about whether mindfulness meditation might alter pro-social behavior. Here we examined whether mindfulness meditation activates human altruism, a component of social cooperation. Using a simple donation game, which is a real-world version of the Dictator's Game, we randomly assigned 326 subjects to a mindfulness meditation online session or control and measured their willingness to donate a portion of their payment for participation as a charitable donation. Subjects who underwent the meditation treatment donated at a 2.61 times higher rate than the control (p = 0.005), after controlling for socio-demographics. We also found a larger treatment effect of meditation among those who did not go to college (p < 0.001) and those who were under 25 years of age (p < 0.001), with both subject groups contributing virtually nothing in the control condition. Our results imply high context modularity of human altruism and the development of intervention approaches including mindfulness meditation to increase social cooperation, especially among subjects with low baseline willingness to contribute.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32300129 PMCID: PMC7162971 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-62652-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Distribution of Participants.
| Category | Meditation | Drawing | |
|---|---|---|---|
| All, N(%) | 164 (50.3%) | 162 (49.7%) | |
| Gender, N(%) | 0.93 | ||
| Male | 110 (33.7%) | 105 (32.2%) | |
| Female | 54 (16.7%) | 56 (17.2%) | |
| Age, Mean (SD) | 32.7 (8.8) | 34.0 (9.5) | 0.12 |
| Race, N(%) | 0.44 | ||
| White/Caucasian | 124 (38.0%) | 113 (34.7%) | |
| Asian | 21 (6.4%) | 27 (8.3%) | |
| Black/African American | 9 (2.8%) | 12 (3.7%) | |
| Hispanic | 20 (6.1%) | 19 (5.8%) | |
| Other | 10 (3.1%) | 9 (2.8%) | |
| Highest Educational Attainment, N(%) | 0.93 | ||
| High school | 27 (8.3%) | 27 (8.3%) | |
| Some College (1–3 years) | 47 (14.4%) | 52 (16.0%) | |
| College (4 years) | 70 (21.5%) | 66 (20.2%) | |
| Masters | 17 (5.2%) | 13 (4.0%) | |
| Other | 3 (0.9%) | 3 (0.9%) |
Estimated treatment effect of meditation on contribution levels.
| Donation (% endowment) | ||
|---|---|---|
| IRR | (SE) | |
| Treatment | 2.61 | (0.96)* |
| Age | 1.07 | (0.02)** |
| Female | 1.67 | (0.59) |
| Went to college | 0.84 | (0.36) |
| Black | 1.84 | (1.18) |
| Hispanic | 5.53 | (1.44)** |
| US | 0.51 | (0.17)* |
| India | 4.94 | (1.01)** |
| Constant | 0.33 | (0.18) |
| N | 326 | |
Notes: *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001. Negative binomial regression model. DV is % payoff donated by a subject. Reported incidence rate ratios and their standard errors adjusted for heteroskedasticity and geographic clusters. Black and Hispanic is indicated only if the subject is in the US, otherwise zero. US and India are as additional controls since they represent the two countries with the most participants.
Figure 1Distributions of contributions in the mindfulness meditation treatment group versus the control. Notes: Predicted contribution levels using the negative binomial regression model that controls for gender, age, education, race and ethnicity, and geography.
Figure 2Interaction effects of education and age with the effect of mindfulness meditation treatment on contributions. Notes: (A) The difference in average contributions between the subjects exposed to mindfulness meditation and those in the control condition is significantly larger among subjects who did not attend college than in those who did. (B) The difference in average contributions between the subjects exposed to mindfulness meditation and those in the control condition is significantly larger in the younger group (under 25 years of age) than in the older group (25 years of age and older). In both cases, mean contribution levels and standard errors (adjusted for clustering by region) estimated using the negative binomial regression model with interaction effects (separately for the two cases) and controlling for gender, age, education, race and ethnicity, and geography.