1,602 research outputs found
Mechanisms of action in mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) and mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) in people with physical and/or psychological conditions: A systematic review
ReviewThis is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record.Background
Recently, there has been an increased interest in studying the effects of mindfulness-based interventions for people with psychological and physical problems. However, the mechanisms of action in these interventions that lead to beneficial physical and psychological outcomes have yet to be clearly identified.
Purpose
The aim of this paper is to review, systematically, the evidence to date on the mechanisms of action in mindfulness interventions in populations with physical and/or psychological conditions.
Method
Searches of seven databases (PsycINFO, Medline (Ovid), Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, EMBASE, CINAHL, AMED, ClinicalTrials.gov) were undertaken in June 2014 and July 2015. We evaluated to what extent the studies we identified met the criteria suggested by Kazdin for establishing mechanisms of action within a psychological treatment (2007, 2009).
Results
We identified four trials examining mechanisms of mindfulness interventions in those with comorbid psychological and physical health problems and 14 in those with psychological conditions. These studies examined a diverse range of potential mechanisms, including mindfulness and rumination. Of these candidate mechanisms, the most consistent finding was that greater self-reported change in mindfulness mediated superior clinical outcomes. However, very few studies fully met the Kazdin criteria for examining treatment mechanisms.
Conclusion
There was evidence that global changes in mindfulness are linked to better outcomes. This evidence pertained more to interventions targeting psychological rather than physical health conditions. While there is promising evidence that MBCT/MBSR intervention effects are mediated by hypothesised mechanisms, there is a lack of methodological rigour in the field of testing mechanisms of action for both MBCT and MBSR, which precludes definitive conclusions
Field-dependent dynamics of the Anderson impurity model
Single-particle dynamics of the Anderson impurity model in the presence of a
magnetic field are considered, using a recently developed local moment
approach that encompasses all energy scales, field and interaction strengths.
For strong coupling in particular, the Kondo scaling regime is recovered. Here
the frequency () and field ()
dependence of the resultant universal scaling spectrum is obtained in large
part analytically, and the field-induced destruction of the Kondo resonance
investigated. The scaling spectrum is found to exhibit the slow logarithmic
tails recently shown to dominate the zero-field scaling spectrum. At the
opposite extreme of the Fermi level, it gives asymptotically exact agreement
with results for statics known from the Bethe ansatz. Good agreement is also
found with the frequency and field-dependence of recent numerical
renormalization group calculations. Differential conductance experiments on
quantum dots in the presence of a magnetic field are likewise considered; and
appear to be well accounted for by the theory. Some new exact results for the
problem are also established
The articulation of enkinaesthetic entanglement
In this article I present an argument for the necessary co-articulation of meaning within our felt enkinaesthetic engagement with our world. The argument will be developed through a series of stages, the first of which will be an elaboration of the notion of articulation of and through the body. This will be followed by an examination of enkinaesthetic experiential entanglement and the role it plays in rendering our world meaningful and our actions values-realising. At this stage I will begin to extend Husserl’s notion of intentional transgression to the enkinaesthetic sphere of lived experience, and in support of this claim I will examine the theoretical and practical work of osteopathic manual listening [Gens & Roche 2014] and the ‘felt sense’ in focusing [Gendlin] which makes possible a shift from a somatic articulation to a semantic, and potentially conceptual, one. Throughout, my position will be compatible with Merleau-Ponty’s claim that “Whenever I try to understand myself, the whole fabric of the perceptible world comes too, and with it comes the others who are caught in it.” [Merleau-Ponty 1964a, p.15]
HST Snaphot Study of Variable Stars in Globular Clusters: Inner Region of NGC 6441
[Abridged] We present the results of a Hubble Space Telescope snapshot
program to survey the inner region of the globular cluster NGC 6441 for its
variable stars. A total of 57 variable stars was found including 38 RR Lyrae
stars, 6 Population II Cepheids, and 12 long period variables. Of the RR Lyrae
stars observed in this survey, 26 are pulsating in the fundamental mode with a
mean period of 0.753d and 12 are first-overtone mode pulsators with a mean
period of 0.365d. These values match up very well with those found in
ground-based surveys. Combining all the available data for NGC 6441, we find
mean periods of 0.759d and 0.375d for the RRab and RRc stars, respectively. We
also find that the RR Lyrae in this survey are located in the same regions of a
period-amplitude diagram as those found in ground-based surveys. Although NGC
6441 is a metal-rich globular cluster, its RR Lyrae more closely resemble those
in Oosterhoff type II globular clusters. However, even compared to typical
Oosterhoff type II systems, the mean period of its RRab stars is unusually
long. We also derived I-band period-luminosity relations for the RR Lyrae
stars. Of the six Population II Cepheids, five are of W Virginis type and one
is a BL Herculis variable stars. This makes NGC 6441, along with NGC 6388, the
most metal-rich globular cluster known to contain these types of variable
stars. Another variable, V118, may also be a Population II Cepheid given its
long period and its separation in magnitude from the RR Lyrae stars. We argue
that there does not appear to be a change in the period-luminosity relation
slope between the BL Herculis and W Virginis stars, but that a change of slope
does occur when the RV Tauri stars are added to the period-luminosity relation.Comment: 28 pages, including 9 figures and 8 tables, emulateapj5/apjfonts
style. Accepted by the Astronomical Journal. Approximate publication date
September 2003. We recommend the interested reader to download the preprint
with full-resolution figures, which can be found at
http://www.astro.puc.cl/~mcatelan/Pritzl.zi
Spectral function of the Kondo model in high magnetic fields
Using a recently developed perturbative renormalization group (RG) scheme, we
calculate analytically the spectral function of a Kondo impurity for either
large frequencies w or large magnetic field B and arbitrary frequencies. For
large w >> max[B,T_K] the spectral function decays as 1/ln^2[ w/T_K ] with
prefactors which depend on the magnetization. The spin-resolved spectral
function displays a pronounced peak at w=B with a characteristic asymmetry. In
a detailed comparison with results from numerical renormalization group (NRG)
and bare perturbation theory in next-to-leading logarithmic order, we show that
our perturbative RG scheme is controlled by the small parameter 1/ln[
max(w,B)/T_K]. Furthermore, we assess the ability of the NRG to resolve
structures at finite frequencies.Comment: 8 pages, version published in PRB, minor change
Local quantum phase transition in the pseudogap Anderson model: scales, scaling and quantum critical dynamics
The pseudogap Anderson impurity model provides a paradigm for understanding
local quantum phase transitions, in this case between generalised fermi liquid
and degenerate local moment phases. Here we develop a non-perturbative local
moment approach to the generic asymmetric model, encompassing all energy scales
and interaction strengths and leading thereby to a rich description of the
problem. We investigate in particular underlying phase boundaries, the critical
behaviour of relevant low-energy scales, and single-particle dynamics embodied
in the local spectrum. Particular attention is given to the resultant universal
scaling behaviour of dynamics close to the transition in both the GFL and LM
phases, the scale-free physics characteristic of the quantum critical point
itself, and the relation between the two.Comment: 39 pages, 19 figure
British industrial relations pluralism in the era of neoliberalism
This article provides a broad overview of the pluralist tradition in UK industrial relations scholarship, identifying its defining characteristics and mapping its evolution in recent decades. It deals in turn with the following: the appreciation of the relative interests of workers and employers that lies at the heart of the pluralist frame of reference, the research agenda that flows from this understanding, pluralist conceptions of context and agency within industrial relations, the standards that pluralists habitually use when assessing the employment relationship, the targets and modes of critique that pluralists direct against intellectual opponents, and the prescriptions that pluralists offer for industrial relations reform. Throughout the article there is a focus on change within the pluralist tradition and the manner in which it has adapted to the hegemony of neoliberalism in the realms of both ideas and policy
A new conceptual framework for revenge firesetting
Revenge has frequently been acknowledged to account for a relatively large proportion of motives in deliberate firesetting. However, very little is actually known about the aetiology of revenge firesetting. Theoretical approaches to revenge-seeking behaviour are discussed. A brief review of how revenge is accounted for in existing theoretical explanations of deliberate firesetting and the known characteristics of revenge firesetters are provided. On this basis, the authors suggest, as a motive, revenge firesetting has to date been misconceptualised. A new conceptual framework is thus proposed, paying particular attention to the contextual, affective, cognitive, volitional and behavioural factors which may influence and generate a single episode of revenge firesetting. Treatment implications and suggestions for future research are also provided
Loneliness, social support and cardiovascular reactivity to laboratory stress
Self-reported or explicit loneliness and social support have been inconsistently associated with cardiovascular reactivity (CVR) to stress. The present study aimed to adapt an implicit measure of loneliness, and use it alongside the measures of explicit loneliness and social support, to investigate their correlations with CVR to laboratory stress. Twenty-five female volunteers aged between 18 and 39 years completed self-reported measures of loneliness and social support, and an Implicit Association Test (IAT) of loneliness. The systolic blood pressure (SBP), diastolic blood pressure (DBP) and heart rate (HR) reactivity indices were measured in response to psychosocial stress induced in the laboratory. Functional support indices of social support were significantly correlated with CVR reactivity to stress. Interestingly, implicit, but not explicit, loneliness was significantly correlated with DBP reactivity after one of the stressors. No associations were found between structural support and CVR indices. Results are discussed in terms of validity of implicit versus explicit measures and possible factors that affect physiological outcomes
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