Dispositional mindfulness: Dissociable affective and cognitive processes
Author(s)
Tsai, Nancy; Treves, Isaac N.; Bauer, Clemens C. C.; Scherer, Ethan; Caballero, Camila; West, Martin R.; Gabrieli, John D. E.; ... Show more Show less
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Mindfulness has been linked to a range of positive social-emotional and cognitive outcomes, but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. As one of the few traits or dispositions that are associated with both affective and cognitive benefits, we asked whether mindfulness is associated with affective and cognitive outcomes through a shared, unitary process or through two dissociable processes. We examined this in adolescents using behavioral measures and also reanalyzed previously reported neuroimaging findings relating mindfulness training to either affect (negative emotion, stress) or cognition (sustained attention). Using multivariate regression analyses, our findings suggest that the relationships between dispositional mindfulness and affective and cognitive processes are behaviorally dissociable and converge with neuroimaging data indicating that mindfulness modulates affect and cognition through separate neural pathways. These findings support the benefits of trait mindfulness on both affective and cognitive processes, and reveal that those benefits are at least partly dissociable in the mind and brain.
Date issued
2024-02-01Department
McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive SciencesPublisher
Springer US
Citation
Tsai, Nancy, Treves, Isaac N., Bauer, Clemens C. C., Scherer, Ethan, Caballero, Camila et al. 2024. "Dispositional mindfulness: Dissociable affective and cognitive processes."
Version: Final published version