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Efthymia Christopoulou
Efthymia Christopoulou

Public Documents 2
Dimensions, Processes, and Outcomes of Meditation on Psychological Well-Being: A Quan...
Efthymia Christopoulou
Vassilis Pavlopoulos

Efthymia Christopoulou

and 1 more

November 18, 2024
Meditation is one of the most widely used psychological tools worldwide, with a plethora of scientific articles documenting its effectiveness and making it an evidence-based practice and method of choice for a variety of mental health problems. However, there are several ambiguities in its approach, noting confusion and alternative use of the terms meditation, mindfulness and transcendence, while the mechanisms and processes of its operation remain unclear. The present research project is a quantitative study that investigated the effects of frequency, duration, total duration and regularity of meditative practices on mindfulness, transcendence and psychological well-being. Overall, the findings highlight the role of meditative experience, particularly stronger engagement in meditative practices. Meditative experience was found to be related to increased levels of mindfulness and associated with all dimensions of mindfulness: increased levels of observability, descriptiveness and action with awareness and lower levels of criticality and reactivity. From the structural equation model tested, psychological well-being is predicted by the application of meditative practices mediated by mindfulness and transcendence. Mindfulness mediates the path from meditative experience to psychological well-being and emerges as a catalyst for the meditative experience in promoting mindfulness and psychological well-being.
Social Representations of Meditation: A Cross-Cultural Qualitative Study with Greek a...
Efthymia Christopoulou
Vassilis Pavlopoulos

Efthymia Christopoulou

and 1 more

November 18, 2024
Meditation and mindfulness have gathered increasing research attention worldwide, with millions of people adopting these practices. Despite being one of the most extensively studied psychological tools with global reach and recognition as a research-based psychotherapeutic practice, there remains ambiguity surrounding its approach. Research on meditation has predominantly taken quantitative approach, with minimal exploration of its cross-cultural dimensions in the international literature. This study aimed to address this gap by focusing on the cross-cultural examination of the social representation of meditation among Greek and Indian participants, both with and without meditation experience. Qualitative research methods, including interviews and thematic analysis were employed. Four main themes emerged from the analysis: meditation meaning-making, meditation teachers, meditation outcomes, and meditation mechanisms. Interestingly, the findings revealed more similarities than differences in the social representations of meditation across cultures. This suggests the presence of universal elements, possibly reflecting fundamental aspects of human functioning that transcend cultural boundaries.

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