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 M Ireland'sThesis on Meditation and health effects
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emc

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Posted - May 14 2012 :  12:25:48 AM  Show Profile  Reply with Quote  Get a Link to this Message
I participated in a survey about meditation some years ago. Now the thesis is written based on 3 articles. Here are the abstracts. Another great contribution!

FULL THESIS

Abstract

This thesis attempts to contribute to the ongoing investigation of the relationship between meditation practice and improvements in psychological health and functioning. The proposition and promise of meditation is deceptively simple: the aspirant devotes effort to training their mind and subsequently experiences improvements in psychological health and functioning. However, not enough is known (at least from a psychological standpoint) about the specific active components of meditation and the mechanisms and pathways by which changes occur. Therefore, three research studies were conducted to shed light on these questions and the three principle sections that make up the body of this thesis are devoted to presenting each study in the form of self-contained research articles.

The first study attempts to take a snapshot of what is currently known about meditation from half a century of scientific research. The approach is a systematic critical review which documents, summarises, and critically evaluates the results of over 250 empirical research studies. This review provides a critical snapshot of the state of the literature and outlines issues in methodology and conceptualizations that serve to limit the usefulness of the extant data. This review also provides strong recommendations for moving the scientific endeavour forward and, in light of the largely atheoretical nature of research, highlights the need for embedding conceptualizations and research designs within substantive theoretical frameworks. A case is made for the traditional meditation philosophies as a starting point for achieving this. The subsequent sections of the thesis attempt a kind of test case for the recommended approaches.

The second study attempts the very difficult task of introducing Buddhist insight (the development of an experiential understanding of impermanence, suffering, and nonself) to the empirical research agenda by proposing and psychometrically assessing a short self-report measure. The overarching aims of this study are to demonstrate that an understanding of the mechanisms by which meditation exerts its effects is enhanced by drawing from the philosophical roots of the practices. This study also aims to demonstrate that individual differences in these processes can be captured by self-report and that doing so is an important step in achieving a more complete understanding of meditation and how it operates.

The third study takes this work further and applies statistical latent variable modelling techniques to assessing multiple theoretical principles relating to meditation practices and how they operate. Based on a review of various theoretical work (traditional Buddhist and Hindu literatures and contemporary transpersonal, humanistic, and clinical psychologies), this section very briefly outlines several guiding philosophical principles relating to the nature of meditation, what its expected outcomes are, and the nature of processes by which these outcomes are achieved. Once again, measurement issues are at the forefront. Individual differences in meditation practice are decomposed into primary dimensions and, through multiple indicators, a comprehensive measurement profile of meditation is proposed. This profile is then tested and modelled as a predictor of positive and negative psychological health and functioning indicators. The role of several theoretically-derived mediators of this relationship is also simultaneously tested.

Across these three studies reported, the following general conclusions are supported:

1. Existing evidence provides consistent, though methodologically weak, support for a positive effect of meditation practice on a range of psychological health and functioning outcomes, and this has been reported across a range of populations;

2. Constructs and processes conceptualised within traditional meditation philosophies as central to how the techniques are understood and how they operate can be measured using self-report instruments;

3. Individual differences in meditation are likely to involve both behavioural aspects accounting for the degree of engagement, and psychological aspects incorporating the intensity or depth of this engagement;

4. Individual differences in these aspects predict large proportions of variance in a range of positive health and functioning outcomes including reductions in suffering and distress, positive emotional states, character strengths, and psychological development;

5. Several factors incorporating attention refinement (mindfulness), changes in self-perception and outlook (transcendence), and worldview (insight) represent plausible mechanisms serving to transmit the effects of meditation on psychological health and functioning. Additionally, it is important to consider a range of theoretical perspectives in delineating the nature and role of these processes;

6. Traditional meditation philosophies have an important role in informing the development of explanatory frameworks outlining what meditation is, what effects it might have, and how these occur.

The culmination of background theoretical and empirical work (including studies one and two) resulted in the formulation of a multivariate model expressing the structure of variance in meditation practice as well as its hypothesised outcomes and intermediary factors. The model and the specific hypotheses it represented received support from two large and independent samples of meditation practitioners.

In closing, this thesis has succeeded in conducting preliminary studies that are theoretically-grounded and methodologically sophisticated. It does not claim to provide definitive answers to the questions that it explores but rather a starting point for testing out new and potentially useful ways of addressing the questions themselves. I believe the data presented here provides important new insights that enhance our understanding of meditation and serve as building blocks for new areas of research.


STUDY 1: “Meditation and Psychological Health and Functioning: A Descriptive and Critical Review”

Abstract

Originally designed to promote religious and spiritual development, meditation practices have been the subject of enormous public and scientific interest for decades. Over this time, significant research efforts have documented the many psychological health impacts associated with these practices. This article provides a descriptive and critical review of over 250 published studies, spanning 45 years of research and exploring a diverse range of meditation techniques and health and functioning outcome variables. The research is organized along the lines of meditation technique, samples, and outcome domains with study information (including limitations) summarized in tables. While the vast majority of findings support the effectiveness of meditation practices in cultivating positive psychological health and functioning, supporting conclusions of beneficence, the majority of evidence has emerged from uncontrolled and methodologically limited investigations, thus failing to support conclusions of efficacy. Finally, a review of the state of the science with a number of suggestions for future research is provided. The need for conceptually-driven studies into the nature of meditation as well as theoretically-grounded investigations is highlighted.

Ireland, M. J. (2012a). Meditation and psychological health and functioning: A descriptive and critical review. The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice, 9(1), 4-19. –Chapter 2 of the thesis.


STUDY 2: “Meditative insight: Conceptual and measurement development”

Abstract

Meditative insight is conceptualised as being at the core of change mechanisms in meditation and mindfulness. Although this construct is fundamental in traditional meditation theories, it has not yet received attention in scientific work. Drawing on traditional Buddhist formulations of meditation, this study outlines the development and psychometric analysis of a new instrument to assess meditative insight. Self-report data on positive and negative psychological functioning indicators was collected from a large (N = 881) heterogeneous cross-section of meditation practitioners. The findings support the reliability and validity of the new instrument and confirm that (1) meditative insight varies as a function of amount and type of meditation training, (2) mindfulness and insight are overlapping yet distinct constructs, (3) insight predicts psychological health and functioning, and (4) insight mediates the effect of mindfulness on psychological health.

Ireland, M. J. (2012b). Meditative insight: conceptual and measurement development. Mental Health, Religion & Culture, 1-21. doi: 10.1080/13674676.2011.645225 –Chapter 3 of the thesis.


STUDY 3: “Meditation and psychological health: Modeling predictors, processes, and outcomes”

Abstract

Despite evidence attesting to positive psychological effects of meditation, little is known about how variance in the level of engagement with meditation actually relates to positive outcomes. This study draws on multiple traditional and contemporary theoretical frameworks to (1) uncover fundamental aspects of variability in meditation practice, (2) test the role of several primary and secondary processes believed to be responsible for positive effects, and (3) explore a range of positive and negative outcomes that are closely aligned with the original intended outcomes of meditation practices. Using two large (each N > 500) heterogeneous samples of meditation practitioners, this study calibrated and then cross-validated a theoretical model testing the plausibility of several causal pathways linking variation in experience with meditation to positive and negative psychological outcomes. Results showed that individual differences in meditation involve both behavioural aspects accounting for the degree of engagement, and psychological aspects incorporating the intensity or depth of this engagement. Variation in these aspects accounts for large proportions of variance in a range of psychological health and functioning outcomes. Several factors representing attention-refinement (mindfulness), changes in self-perception and outlook (transcendence), worldview (insight), and psychological development represent plausible change-mechanisms serving to transmit the effects of meditation on psychological health and functioning.

Ireland, M. J. (2012 Under Review). Meditation and psychological health: Modeling theoretically-derived predictors, processes, and outcomes. Mindfulness –Chapter 4 of the thesis.

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