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Time perception, mindfulness and attentional capacities in transcendental meditators and matched controls

Schötz, E.; Otten, S.; Wittmann, M.; Schmidt, Sabine; Kohls, Niko; Meißner, Karin (2016)

Personality and Individual Differences 2016 93, 16–21.
DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2015.10.023


Peer Reviewed
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Psychophysiology of duration estimation in experienced mindfulness meditators and matched controls

Otten, S.; Schötz, E.; Wittmann, M.; Kohls, Niko; Schmidt, S.; Meißner, Karin (2015)

Frontiers in Psychology, 6. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01215.
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01215


Peer Reviewed
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Subjective expansion of extended time-spans in experienced meditators

Wittmann, M.; Otten, S.; Schötz, E.; Sarikaya, A.; Lehnen, H.; Jo, H.-G.; Kohls, Niko...

Frontiers in Psychology, 5..


Peer Reviewed

Subjective expansion of extended time-spans in experienced meditators

Wittmann, M.; Otten, S.; Schötz, E.; Sarikaya, A.; Lehnen, H.; Jo, H.-G.; Kohls, Niko...

Frontiers in Psychology 2015 5, 1586.
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01586


Peer Reviewed
 

Experienced meditators typically report that they experience time slowing down in meditation practice as well as in everyday life. Conceptually this phenomenon may be understood through functional states of mindfulness, i.e., by attention regulation, body awareness, emotion regulation, and enhanced memory. However, hardly any systematic empirical work exists regarding the experience of time in meditators. In the current cross-sectional study, we investigated whether 42 experienced mindfulness meditation practitioners (with on average 10 years of experience) showed differences in the experience of time as compared to 42 controls without any meditation experience matched for age, sex, and education. The perception of time was assessed with a battery of psychophysical tasks assessing the accuracy of prospective time judgments in duration discrimination, duration reproduction, and time estimation in the milliseconds to minutes range as well with several psychometric instruments related to subjective time such as the Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory, the Barratt Impulsivity Scale and the Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory. In addition, subjective time judgments on the current passage of time and retrospective time ranges were assessed. While subjective judgements of time were found to be significantly different between the two groups on several scales, no differences in duration estimates in the psychophysical tasks were detected. Regarding subjective time, mindfulness meditators experienced less time pressure, more time dilation, and a general slower passage of time. Moreover, they felt that the last week and the last month passed more slowly. Overall, although no intergroup differences in psychophysical tasks were detected, the reported findings demonstrate a close association between mindfulness meditation and the subjective feeling of the passage of time captured by psychometric instruments.

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Psychophysiology of duration estimation in experienced mindfulness meditators and matched controls

Otten, S.; Schötz, E.; Wittmann, M.; Schmidt, Sabine; Kohls, Niko; Meißner, Karin (2015)

Frontiers in Psychology 2015 6, 1215.
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01215


Peer Reviewed
 

Recent research suggests that bodily signals and interoception are strongly related to our sense of time. Mindfulness meditators train to be aware of their body states and therefore could be more accurate at interval timing. In this study, n = 22 experienced mindfulness meditators and n = 22 matched controls performed both, an acoustic and a visual duration reproduction task of 8, 14, and 20 s intervals, while heart rate and skin conductance were continuously assessed. In addition, participants accomplished a heart beat perception task and two selective attention tasks. Results revealed no differences between meditators and controls with respect to performance in duration reproduction or attentional capacities. Additionally no group difference in heart beat perception scores was found. Across all subjects, correlational analyses revealed several associations between performance in the duration reproduction tasks and psychophysiological changes, the latter being also related to heart beat perception scores. Furthermore, former findings of linearly increasing cardiac periods and decreasing skin conductance levels during the auditory duration estimation task (Meissner and Wittmann, 2011) could be replicated, and these changes could also be observed during a visual duration reproduction task. In contrast to our earlier findings, the heart beat perception test was not related with timing performance. Overall, although experienced meditators did not differ from matched controls with respect to duration reproduction and interoceptive awareness, this study adds significantly to the emerging view that time perception is related to autonomic regulation and awareness of body states.

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Individual differences in self-attributed mindfulness levels are related to the experience of time and cognitive self-control

Wittmann, M.; Peter, J.; Gutina, O.; Otten, S.; Kohls, Niko; Meißner, Karin (2014)

Personality and Individual Differences, 64(0), 41-45. , 41-45.


Peer Reviewed

Placebo – Special Issue. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B:

Meißner, Karin; Kohls, Niko; Colloca, L. (2011)

The Royal Society Publishing.


Open Access

Introduction to placebo effects in medicine: mechanisms and clinical implications

Meißner, Karin; Kohls, Niko; Colloca, L. (2011)

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 366(1572), 1783-1789. .



Prof. Dr. Karin Meißner


Hochschule Coburg

Fakultät Angewandte Naturwissenschaften und Gesundheit (FNG)
Friedrich-Streib-Str. 2
96450 Coburg

T +49 9561 317 8030 / 8086
Karin.Meissner[at]hs-coburg.de