Relating Dispositional Mindfulness and Long-Term Mindfulness Training with Executive Functioning, Emotion Regulation, and Well-Being in Pre-adolescents

Lena Wimmer*, Kate R. Isherwood, John Parkinson, Dusana Dorjee

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The present study examined whether both dispositional mindfulness without mindfulness training and mindfulness resulting from longer-term mindfulness training are positively associated with pre-adolescents’ well-being, via enhanced executive functioning (EF) and emotion regulation. EF was assessed in a GoNoGo task via behavioral performance and event-related potentials. Study 1 (N = 62) investigated associations of dispositional mindfulness without mindfulness training with EF, well-being and emotion regulation; longitudinal Study 2 with an active control group compared the effects of long-term mindfulness training (N = 28) with a positive psychology intervention (N = 15). Dispositional mindfulness without training was associated with lower EF, unrelated to emotion regulation and the relationship with well-being was mixed. Long-term mindfulness training was positively related to EF and well-being (reduced negative affect), but was uncorrelated with emotion regulation and mindfulness scores. Taken together, long-term mindfulness training was found to have mixed effects. Further research is required in this area.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)534-553
Number of pages20
JournalPsychological Studies
Volume68
Issue number4
Early online date28 Jul 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 28 Jul 2023

Keywords

  • Children
  • Event-related potential
  • Executive function
  • Mindfulness
  • Well-being

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