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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The Serenity of the Meditating Mind: A Cross-Cultural Psychometric Study on a Two-Factor Higher Order Structure of Mindfulness, Its Effects, and Mechanisms Related to Mental Health among Experienced Meditators

Ulrich S. TranAusias Cebolla MartiTobias M. GlückJoaquim SolerJavier Garcia-campayoTheresa Von MoyUniversitat Autònoma De Barcelona

subject

MaleMindfulnessPsychometricsEmotionsSocial SciencesAnxietyAtencióSurveys and QuestionnairesPsychologyMedicineAttentionMental health and psychiatryMeditationmedia_commonAged 80 and overMultidisciplinaryDepressionQRMiddle AgedConfirmatory factor analysisClinical PsychologyMeditationMental HealthMedicineAnxietyFemalemedicine.symptomMindfulnessResearch ArticleClinical psychologyAdultCross-Cultural ComparisonPsychological AdjustmentAdolescentPsychometricsSciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectStructural equation modelingYoung AdultHumansBuddhismAgedBehaviorbusiness.industryBiology and Life SciencesRelaxation (Psychology)Mental healthCross-cultural studiesPsychological stressbusinessStress Psychological

description

Objective To investigate the psychometric and structural properties of the Five Facets Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ) among meditators, to develop a short form, and to examine associations of mindfulness with mental health and the mechanisms of mindfulness. Methods Two independent samples were used, a German (n = 891) and a Spanish (n = 393) meditator sample, practicing various meditation styles. Structural and psychometric properties of the FFMQ were investigated with multigroup confirmatory factor analysis and exploratory structural equation modeling. Associations with mental health and mechanisms of mindfulness were examined with path analysis. Results The derived short form broadly matched a previous item selection in samples of non-meditators. Self-regulated Attention and Orientation to Experience governed the facets of mindfulness on a higher-order level. Higher-order factors of mindfulness and meditation experience were negatively associated with symptoms of depression and anxiety, and perceived stress. Decentering and nonattachment were the most salient mechanisms of mindfulness. Aspects of emotion regulation, bodily awareness, and nonattachment explained the effects of mindfulness on depression and anxiety. Conclusions A two-component conceptualization for the FFMQ, and for the study of mindfulness as a psychological construct, is recommended for future research. Mechanisms of mindfulness need to be examined in intervention studies.

10.1371/journal.pone.0110192&representation=pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10234/123703