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Beyond Viral: Interpersonal Communication in the Internet Age
Authors:Jonah Berger
Institution:The Wharton School , University of Pennsylvania , Philadelphia , Pennsylvania
Abstract:Contemporary scholarship on mindfulness casts it as a form of purely nonevaluative engagement with experience. Yet, traditionally mindfulness was not intended to operate in a vacuum of dispassionate observation, but was seen as facilitative of eudaimonic mental states. In spite of this historical context, modern psychological research has neglected to ask the question of how the practice of mindfulness affects downstream emotion regulatory processes to impact the sense of meaning in life. To fill this lacuna, here we describe the mindfulness-to-meaning theory, from which we derive a novel process model of mindful positive emotion regulation informed by affective science, in which mindfulness is proposed to introduce flexibility in the generation of cognitive appraisals by enhancing interoceptive attention, thereby expanding the scope of cognition to facilitate reappraisal of adversity and savoring of positive experience. This process is proposed to culminate in a deepened capacity for meaning-making and greater engagement with life.
Keywords:affective science  broaden-and-build  emotion regulation  eudaimonic well-being  interoception  mindfulness  mindfulness-to-meaning theory  positive emotion  posttraumatic growth  reappraisal  upward spiral
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