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Attentional processes and meditation
Authors:Holley S. Hodgins  Kathryn C. Adair
Affiliation:a Skidmore College, United States;b National Center for PTSD, Women’s Health Sciences Division, VA Boston Healthcare System, United States
Abstract:Visual attentional processing was examined in adult meditators and non-meditators on behavioral measures of change blindness, concentration, perspective-shifting, selective attention, and sustained inattentional blindness. Results showed that meditators (1) noticed more changes in flickering scenes and noticed them more quickly, (2) counted more accurately in a challenging concentration task, (3) identified a greater number of alternative perspectives in multiple perspectives images, and (4) showed less interference from invalid cues in a visual selective attention task, but (5) did not differ on a measure of sustained inattentional blindness. Together, results show that regular meditation is associated with more accurate, efficient, and flexible visual attentional processing across diverse tasks that have high face validity outside of the laboratory. Furthermore, effects were assessed in a context separate from actual meditation practice, suggesting that meditators’ better visual attention is not just immediate, but extends to contexts separate from meditation practice.
Keywords:Attention   Meditation   Change blindness   Selective attention   Perspective-shifting   Visual concentration   Sustained inattentional blindness
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