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Mindfulness and stress reactivity: a preliminary investigation

journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-17, 00:07 authored by Timothy C Skinner, Carla Anstey, Sharon Baird, Meg Foreman, Ashley Kelly, Chris Magee
AbstractA number of measures of mindfulness have been developed to assess one or more facets of mindfulness. However, to date, all of these have been validated by comparing the mindfulness questionnaire with other self‐report measures of theoretically related constructs. Given the problems of demand characteristics and shared method variance, other approaches to validation are warranted. Therefore, we sought to determine whether individuals who describe themselves as more mindful evidence lower levels of stress reactivity. Thirty‐six university students completed the Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills and the Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test. Results indicated that those individuals who described themselves as more mindful show smaller cardiovascular increases in response to the stress task (heart rate r = −0.38, diastolic blood pressure r = −0.43). This study supports the validity of the Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills, indicating that people who score more highly on this measure of mindfulness show less marked cardiovascular reactivity to a low‐grade mental stress task. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

History

Journal

Spirituality and Health International

Volume

9

Pagination

241-248

ISSN

1743-1867

eISSN

1557-0665

Language

en

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

4

Publisher

Wiley