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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Decentering, Acceptance, and Non-Attachment : Challenging the Question "Is It Me?"
Joaquim SolerJoaquim SolerJoaquim SolerJesus Montero-marinElisabet Domínguez-clavéElisabet Domínguez-clavéElisabet Domínguez-clavéSara GonzálezSara GonzálezJuan Carlos PascualJuan Carlos PascualJuan Carlos PascualAusiàs CebollaAusiàs CebollaMarcelo DemarzoBhikkhu AnalayoBhikkhu AnalayoJavier García-campayoJavier García-campayosubject
confirmatory factor analysisdemographyegoMindfulnessmindfulnessage distributionRC435-571non attachmentconvenience sampledecenteringSalut mentalmedia_commonOriginal ResearchPsychiatryDepressionadultVariance (accounting)Large samplePsychiatry and Mental healthagedMeditaciófemalepsychological resiliencedepressionNon-attachmentPsychological resiliencemedicine.symptomPsychologyConstruct (philosophy)MindfulnessCognitive psychologynon-attachmentmedia_common.quotation_subjectsex differenceArticleDelusionmaleId ego and super-egomedicinecross-sectional studycontrolled studyhumanresilienceDecenteringResiliencemajor clinical studysocial statusAcceptanceself conceptadolescentexploratory researchpsychometryrandomized controlled trialneuropsychological testpsychological well-beingThird waveacceptancedescription
Among mindfulness measures the three constructs acceptance, decentering, and non-attachment are psychometrically closely related, despite their apparent semantic differences. These three facets present robust psychometric features and can be considered core themes in most “third wave” clinical models. The aim of the present study was to explore the apparently different content domains (acceptance, decentering, and non-attachment) by administering various psychometric scales in a large sample of 608 volunteers. Resilience and depression were also assessed. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses performed in two randomly selected subsamples showed a bifactor approximation. The explained common variance suggested a unidimensional nature for the general factor, with good psychometric properties, which we named “Delusion of Me” (DoM). This construct is also strongly correlated with resilience and depression, and appears to be a solid latent general construct closely related to the concept of “ego.” DoM emerges as a potentially transdiagnostic construct with influence on well-being and clinical indexes such as resilience and depression. Further studies should analyze the potential utility of this new construct at a therapeutic level. Copyright © 2021 Soler, Montero-Marin, Domínguez-Clavé, González, Pascual, Cebolla, Demarzo, Analayo and García-Campayo.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-11-18 |