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Mechanisms of Mindfulness and Stress Resilience: A Mobile App Mindfulness Training Study

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Mindfulness
Psychological Stress
Interventions
Behavioral: Analytic Thinking Training
Behavioral: Mindfulness Training
Behavioral: Mindful Attention Only Training
Registration Number
NCT02433431
Lead Sponsor
Carnegie Mellon University
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to test the active components of mindfulness meditation for reducing psychological stress and improving biomarkers of health. This study compares the effects of three brief trainings: (1) training in both present-moment attention and mindful acceptance, (2) training in present-focused attention, and (3) an active psychological training with no mindfulness content.

Detailed Description

Mindfulness meditation practices are widely used among the general public, with people seeking to reduce stress, pain, inflammation, depression, and disease symptoms. Moreover, randomized controlled trials have shown mindfulness training programs to be effective in improving a broad range of psychological and physical health outcomes, particularly among populations with high stress burdens. Still, little is known about the mechanisms underlying mindfulness training that drive these effects. This study tests the active components of mindfulness that impact stress responding and health biomarkers.

The study separates attention and acceptance mindfulness instructions into three 14-day training programs delivered to a stressed adult population: (1) attention and acceptance instructions, (2) attentional monitoring instructions only, or (3) analytic thinking with no mindfulness instruction. Intervention programs are delivered on participants' own smartphones, providing a platform for maximal experimental control in testing the active ingredients of mindfulness training.

Participants are recruited from the Pittsburgh community. At a baseline laboratory session, they complete psychosocial questionnaires and tasks and provide a dried blood spot sample. On their own, they complete pre- and post-intervention Ecological Momentary Assessment measures of stress, attention, and acceptance in daily life. Between these assessments, participants have 14 days to complete their randomly assigned 14-lesson intervention program. Participants return to the lab for post-intervention assessments (questionnaires, tasks, dried blood sample), listen to a final training session from their intervention program, and complete the Trier Social Stress Test. Participants are compensated.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
153
Inclusion Criteria
  • English speaking
  • Moderate- to high-stress (4-item Perceived Stress Scale score of 6 or higher)
Exclusion Criteria
  • Diagnosis of chronic mental (e.g., recurrent depression, schizophrenia, personality disorder) or physical disease (e.g., cancer, HIV, heart disease, diabetes, bleeding disorder)
  • Hospitalization in past 3 months
  • Medication use that interferes with HPA-axis activity (e.g., corticosteroids)
  • Current oral contraceptive use
  • Current antibiotic, antiviral, or antimicrobial treatment
  • Travel outside the country within the past 6 months to any country on the CDC travel alert list
  • Recreational drug use, excessive alcohol or tobacco use
  • Significant experience with or daily practice of mindfulness meditation or related mind-body practice

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Analytic Thinking TrainingAnalytic Thinking Training14-lesson audio-guided analytic thinking program encouraging reflection on one's thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, but not instructing mindfulness
Mindfulness TrainingMindfulness Training14-lesson audio-guided mindfulness training program instructing present-moment attention and an orientation of acceptance
Mindful Attention Only TrainingMindful Attention Only Training14-lesson audio-guided mindfulness training program instructing present-moment attention only
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Daily life stress assessed via Ecological Momentary Assessmentchange from baseline 3-day period to post-intervention 3-day period, which is an average of 2.5 weeks
Inflammatory Biomarkers assessed via Dried Blood Spotchange from baseline to post-intervention, which is an average of 3.5 weeks

Five Dried Blood Spot samples are obtained from participants' finger for assessment of circulating markers of inflammation (CRP, IL-6).

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Daily life state attention and acceptance assessed via Ecological Momentary Assessmentchange from baseline 3-day period to post-intervention 3-day period, which is an average of 2.5 weeks
Subjective stress in response to social evaluative threat (TSST)assessed at post-intervention, which is an average of 3.5 weeks
Salivary Cortisol AUC in response to social evaluative threat (TSST)assessed at post-intervention, which is an average of 3.5 weeks, at time 0, and 25, 35, and 60 minutes post-TSST
Blood Pressure reactivity to social evaluative threat (TSST)assessed at post-intervention, which is an average of 3.5 weeks, at 2-minute intervals during session
Evening salivary cortisolchange from baseline 3-day period to post-intervention 3-day period, which is an average of 2.5 weeks
Sustained attention measured by the Dichotic Listening Taskchange from baseline to post-intervention, which is an average of 3.5 weeks

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Carnegie Mellon University

🇺🇸

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States

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