School of Psychology, National University of Ireland Galway, Newcastle Road, Galway, Ireland.
BMC Psychol. 2018 Apr 5;6(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s40359-018-0226-3.
Arguments for including mindfulness instruction in higher education have included claims about the benefits of mindfulness practice for critical thinking. While there is theoretical support for this claim, empirical support is limited. The aim of this study was to test this claim by investigating the effects of an online mindfulness intervention on executive function, critical thinking skills and associated thinking dispositions.
Participants recruited from a university were randomly allocated, following screening, to either a mindfulness meditation group or a sham meditation group. Both the researchers and the participants were blind to group allocation. The intervention content for both groups was delivered through the Headspace online application, an application which provides guided meditations to users. Both groups were requested to complete 30 guided mindfulness meditation sessions across a 6 week period. Primary outcome measures assessed mindfulness, executive functioning, critical thinking, actively open-minded thinking and need for cognition. Secondary outcome measures assessed wellbeing, positive and negative affect, and real-world outcomes.
In a series of full-information maximum likelihood analyses, significant increases in mindfulness dispositions and critical thinking scores were observed in both the mindfulness meditation and sham meditation groups. However, no significant effects of group allocation were observed for either primary or secondary measures. Furthermore, mediation analyses testing the indirect effect of group allocation through executive functioning performance did not reveal a significant result and moderation analyses showed that the effect of the intervention did not depend on baseline levels of the key thinking dispositions, actively open-minded thinking and need for cognition.
No evidence was found to suggest that engaging in guided mindfulness practice for 6 weeks using the online intervention method applied in this study improves critical thinking performance. While further research is warranted, claims regarding the benefits of mindfulness practice for critical thinking should be tempered in the meantime.
The study was initially registered in the AEA Social Science Registry before the recruitment was initiated (RCT ID: AEARCTR-0000756; 14/11/2015) and retrospectively registered in the ISRCTN registry ( RCT ID: ISRCTN16588423 ) in line with requirements for publishing the study protocol.
将正念训练纳入高等教育的论据包括正念练习对批判性思维的益处。虽然这一说法有理论依据,但实证依据有限。本研究旨在通过调查在线正念干预对执行功能、批判性思维技能和相关思维倾向的影响来检验这一说法。
从一所大学招募的参与者在经过筛选后,被随机分配到正念冥想组或假冥想组。研究人员和参与者都不知道分组情况。两组的干预内容都是通过 Headspace 在线应用程序提供的,该应用程序为用户提供引导式冥想。两组都被要求在 6 周内完成 30 次引导式正念冥想课程。主要结局指标评估正念、执行功能、批判性思维、积极开放思维和认知需求。次要结局指标评估幸福感、积极和消极情绪以及现实世界的结果。
在一系列全信息最大似然分析中,正念冥想组和假冥想组的正念倾向和批判性思维得分均显著提高。然而,组间分配对主要或次要指标均无显著影响。此外,通过执行功能表现测试组间分配的中介分析没有发现显著结果,而调节分析表明,干预的效果不依赖于关键思维倾向、积极开放思维和认知需求的基线水平。
没有证据表明,在本研究中应用的在线干预方法下,进行 6 周的引导式正念练习能提高批判性思维表现。虽然需要进一步的研究,但在此期间,应谨慎对待正念练习对批判性思维有益的说法。
该研究最初在招募开始前在 AEA 社会科学注册处注册( RCT ID :AEARCTR-0000756;2015 年 11 月 14 日),并根据发表研究方案的要求在 ISRCTN 注册处( RCT ID :ISRCTN16588423 )进行了回顾性注册。