Abstract

ObjectivesMindfulness has been positively associated with affective well-being, which may be explained by improved affective disengagement from prior experiences.MethodsWe used a dynamic network approach to represent temporal interconnections between specific affective states (i.e., network density)—with less interconnected states indicating better affective disengagement—to investigate whether mindfulness predicted a lower network density. One-hundred twenty-five undergraduate students (M age = 22.87; SD = 5.06 years; 77.6% female) completed a 40-day ambulatory assessment, reporting on their affective experiences and state mindfulness six times a day, and either practiced mindfulness or were on a wait-list (control condition).ResultsWe found that neither the mindfulness training, β = −.11, p = .222, nor state mindfulness, β = −.06, p = .484, were associated with affective network density. However, given prior research indicating the importance of prior meditation experience, we found that participants with prior meditation experience reported lower affective network density when they reported higher state mindfulness than participants without meditation experiences, β = −.20, p = .048.ConclusionThe present study found that neither high levels of mindfulness nor a mindfulness training automatically improved affective disengagement in the form of lower network density. Rather, it seems that only those who were already familiar with practicing mindfulness and who were mindful in their daily life experienced easier disengagement from previous affective experiences. These findings may point toward a different, more complex, understanding of mindfulness in experienced meditators.

Highlights

  • The present study investigated whether a mindfulness training and state mindfulness helped people to disengage from prior affective experiences in daily life, which was assumed to represent a basic mechanism underlying the beneficial effects of mindfulness

  • The tendency to disengage from prior experiences was indexed by temporal network density (Bringmann et al 2016b; Pe et al 2015), with higher density values reflecting less ability to disengage from prior experiences

  • On the basis of both previous laboratory studies (Britton et al 2012; Cho et al 2017) and recent ambulatory assessment studies that studied affective inertia (Keng and Tong 2016; Rowland et al 2018) we assumed that everyday affective experiences of participants who train in mindfulness and who report high levels of state mindfulness would be more able to disengage from previous affective experiences in everyday life, as reflected by a less connected affect network, relative to participants who were in the control condition or who reported low levels of state mindfulness

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Summary

Objectives

Mindfulness has been positively associated with affective well-being, which may be explained by improved affective disengagement from prior experiences

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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