Abstract

(1) Background: Mind-body interventions (MBI), such as meditation or other relaxation techniques, have become the focus of attention in the clinical and health sciences. Differences in the effects of induction techniques are being increasingly investigated. (2) Methods: Here, we compared changes in the individual experience of time, space, and self in 44 students in an integrative health-promotion program. They participated in a study employing mindfulness meditation and a relaxation intervention with one week between sessions, thus employing a within-subjects design. (3) Results: No significant differences were detected when subjective reports were compared directly after each intervention. However, we found significant sequence effects between t1 and t2, independent of the meditation type. The sense of self diminished, the present orientation increased, and the past and future orientations decreased in both interventions. (4) Conclusions: We propose using scales to assess subjective time, self, and space as basic constituents of experience to measure the specificity of intervention methods, as well as longitudinal changes.

Highlights

  • In the last decades, mindfulness-meditation techniques (MMT), as well as mind-body interventions (MBI), have become a focus of attention in the clinical and health sciences [1]

  • A 2018 systematic review of 24 Randomized Controlled Trials (RCT) studies demonstrated that MBIs have small-to-moderate positive effects on heart failure patients’ objective and subjective outcomes [3]

  • The aim of the present study was to investigate the transitory effects on experienced states of consciousness and what changes functionally in psychological variables associated with self, space, and time perception during meditative states [19]

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Summary

Introduction

Mindfulness-meditation techniques (MMT), as well as mind-body interventions (MBI), have become a focus of attention in the clinical and health sciences [1]. MMTs and MBIs focus on the relationships among the brain, mind, body, and behavior, and their effect on health and disease [2]. MBIs were found to be able to alter the expression of our genes, alter chromosomal telomere lengths, or mitochondrial metabolism, and potentially reduce risk for certain disease [4,5]. A 2017 review showed that MBIs can reverse certain molecular reactions, essentially generating the “opposite of the effects of chronic stress on gene expression,” which could lead to a reduced risk of inflammation-related diseases [6]. Results from a 2016 study that compared popular MBIs led researchers to conclude “mind-body interventions can improve a person’s level of mental health when compared to those who do not practice these techniques” [7]

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