Relationships between meditation depth, absorption, meditation practice, and mindfulness: A latent variable approach

Autoren/Mitwirkende
Titel
Relationships between meditation depth, absorption, meditation practice, and mindfulness: A latent variable approach
Zusammenfassung
Meditation experiences evolve along a spectrum, ranging from an effortful struggle with the technique to deep transpersonal states where all dualities dissolve. The present study investigated to what extent the depth of meditation is influenced by the amount of meditation practice and the personality trait of absorption, and whether deep experiences influence the mindfulness of meditators in everyday life. A set of questionnaires (Meditation Depth Questionnaire, Tellegen Absorption Scale, and Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory) was distributed to meditators (N = 251) practicing different techniques. A structural equation modeling analysis revealed that absorption exerted a stronger influence on meditation depth (path coefficient: .48) than the amount of meditation practice (path coefficient: .21). Mindfulness was strongly influenced by meditation depth (path coefficient: .42) and moderately by absorption (path coefficient: .21). These complex relations between practice, personality, meditation experiences, and everyday behavior should be considered in future research on transpersonal states induced by meditation. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)
Publikation
Journal of Transpersonal Psychology
Band
38
Ausgabe
2
Seiten
179-199
Datum
2006
ISSN
0722-5547
Kurztitel
Relationships between meditation depth, absorption, meditation practice, and mindfulness
Bibliothekskatalog
APA PsycNet
Extra
Place: US Publisher: Association for Transpersonal Psychology
Zitierung
Hölzel, B., & Ott, U. (2006). Relationships between meditation depth, absorption, meditation practice, and mindfulness: A latent variable approach. Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, 38(2), 179–199.
Team