Loving-kindness language exposure leads to changes in sensitivity to imagined pain |
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Authors: | Patrick B. Williams Greg Poljacik Jean Decety Howard C. Nusbaum |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA |
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Abstract: | To better understand the cultivation of positive intra- and interpersonal emotions, we examined an argument that some effects of contemplative training result from language processing. We presented participants with loving-kindness language used in kindness-meditation training studies and asked them to rate imagined pain. If loving-kindness language processing is responsible for some effects recently reported we expected this language could affect intra- and interpersonal sensitivity. Loving-kindness-language participants rated imagined other-pain significantly higher and imagined self-pain significantly lower than closely matched control participants. As a result of this interaction, the loving-kindness-language group showed no significant difference between self-pain and other-pain, whereas controls rated self-pain significantly higher than other-pain. These results suggest that exposure to loving-kindness-language in Loving-Kindness Meditation leads to changes in sensitivity to own and vicarious distress without explicit training. These findings underscore that meditation-like effects may be easily induced. Further research is needed to determine duration and degree of effect. |
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Keywords: | Language cognition meditation loving-kindness pain |
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