Read Clinical Handbook of Mindfulness Online
Authors: Fabrizio Didonna,Jon Kabat-Zinn
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et al.
(2007)
showed that depressed patients who responded to CBT showed greater gains in decentering than those successfully treated with medication.
In addition, high levels of decentering post-treatment were associated with
lower rates of relapse during an 18-month follow-up period.
Fresco, Moore, et al. (2007) note that the EQ was not designed to be a
measure of mindfulness. However, definitions of decentering are very similar
to descriptions of mindfulness summarized earlier. Empirical investigations
of relations between the EQ and measures of mindfulness have not yet been
conducted.
Performance-Based Tasks
Self-report methods can be subject to demand characteristics or response
biases, and some aspects of mindfulness may be difficult for individuals to
report on, especially if they have no meditation experience. Thus, it is impor-
tant to develop additional tools for assessing mindfulness that do not rely
on self-report methods. Unfortunately, very little research has examined the
assessment of mindfulness by non-self-report methods.
Bishop et al. (2004)
Chapter 9 Assessment of Mindfulness
163
suggested several laboratory- or computer-based tasks for which perfor-
mance may reflect aspects of the tendency or ability to be mindful. For exam-
ple, as the practice of mindfulness should cultivate both sustained attention
and flexibility of attention, more mindful individuals should score higher on
established tests of vigilance and attention switching. In addition, mindful-
ness encourages observation of stimuli without secondary elaborative pro-
cessing. Therefore, more mindful individuals should perform better on tasks
that require inhibition of semantic processing, such as the emotional Stroop
task
(Williams, Mathews, & MacLeod, 1996).
The Implicit Associations Test
(Greenwald, McGhee, & Schwartz, 1998)
could provide a method for assessing the tendency to associate negative emotions with avoidance rather than
approach. Because the practice of mindfulness encourages acceptance and
allowing of negative emotion, this tendency should be lower in more mindful
individuals.
Some authors have suggested that responses to stressful or unpleas-
ant experiences in a laboratory setting might reflect levels of mindful-
ness or acceptance. Several studies have shown that participants who
are instructed to adopt a mindful perspective while experiencing short-
term, laboratory-induced pain, negative mood, or panic-like symptoms show
quicker recovery or greater willingness to repeat the experience than those
given suppression, distraction, or rumination instructions (e.g., Broder-
ick,
2005;
Levitt, Brown, Orsillo, & Barlow, 2004).
Zettle and colleagues found that participants who scored higher on experiential avoidance (as
measured by the AAQ) also showed lower pain tolerance
(Zettle et al.,
2005)
and were more distressed by unpleasant sensations (Zettle, Peterson, Hocker, & Provines,
2007).
However, whether such tasks provide adequate indices of individuals’ levels of mindfulness or acceptance requires more
investigation.
Conclusion
No single method of psychological assessment can provide a complete
picture of the characteristic it is designed to measure. Self-report question-
naires, structured interviews, performance-based measures, and other meth-
ods all have strengths and weaknesses, and each may yield useful data not
provided by the others
(Meyer et al., 2001).
Mindfulness, as noted ear-
lier, appears to be unusually difficult to define and conceptualize, perhaps
because it is associated with the “mysterious territory” of consciousness
(Brown & Ryan, 2004,
p. 242, see also Chapter 4 of this volume) or because mindful acceptance is an atypical way of meeting adversity in our culture
(Santorelli, 1999).
Mindfulness-based interventions address these difficulties through extensive use of experiential methods and by placing less emphasis on intellectual learning
(Hayes et al., 1999;
Segal et al., 2002).
Given the difficulty of translating mindfulness and acceptance into the concrete
operational definitions required by scientific methods of assessment and the
importance of understanding of how mindfulness-based treatments work,
it is essential that we continue to strive for the most productive combina-
tion of critical thinking and open mindedness about how to assess these
constructs.
164
Ruth A. Baer, Erin Walsh, and Emily L. B. Lykins
Appendix: Five-Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire
Please rate each of the following statements using the scale provided.
Write the number in the blank that best describes your own opinion
of what is generally true for you
.
1
2
3
4
5
never or very
rarely
sometimes
often
very often or
rarely true
true
true
true
always true
1. When I’m walking, I deliberately notice the sensations of my body
moving.
2. I’m good at finding words to describe my feelings.
3. I criticize myself for having irrational or inappropriate emotions.
4. I perceive my feelings and emotions without having to react
to them.
5. When I do things, my mind wanders off and I’m easily distracted.
6. When I take a shower or bath, I stay alert to the sensations of water
on my body.
7. I can easily put my beliefs, opinions, and expectations into words.
8. I don’t pay attention to what I’m doing because I’m daydreaming,
worrying, or otherwise distracted.
9. I watch my feelings without getting lost in them.
10. I tell myself I shouldn’t be feeling the way I’m feeling.
11. I notice how foods and drinks affect my thoughts, bodily sensations,
and emotions.
12. It’s hard for me to find the words to describe what I’m thinking.
13. I am easily distracted.
14. I believe some of my thoughts are abnormal or bad and I shouldn’t
think that way.
15. I pay attention to sensations, such as the wind in my hair or sun on
my face.
16. I have trouble thinking of the right words to express how I feel
about things
17. I make judgments about whether my thoughts are good or bad.
18. I find it difficult to stay focused on what’s happening in the present.
19. When I have distressing thoughts or images, I “step back” and am
aware of the thought or image without getting taken over by it.
20. I pay attention to sounds, such as clocks ticking, birds chirping, or
cars passing.
21. In difficult situations, I can pause without immediately reacting.
22. When I have a sensation in my body, it’s difficult for me to describe
it because I can’t find the right words.
23. It seems I am “running on automatic” without much awareness of
what I’m doing.
24. When I have distressing thoughts or images, I feel calm soon after.
25. I tell myself that I shouldn’t be thinking the way I’m thinking.
26. I notice the smells and aromas of things.
Chapter 9 Assessment of Mindfulness
165
27. Even when I’m feeling terribly upset, I can find a way to put it
into words.
28. I rush through activities without being really attentive to them.
29. When I have distressing thoughts or images I am able just to notice
them without reacting.
30. I think some of my emotions are bad or inappropriate and I
shouldn’t feel them.
31. I notice visual elements in art or nature, such as colors, shapes,
textures, or patterns of light and shadow.
32. My natural tendency is to put my experiences into words.
33. When I have distressing thoughts or images, I just notice them and
let them go.
34. I do jobs or tasks automatically without being aware of what
I’m doing.
35. When I have distressing thoughts or images, I judge myself as good
or bad, depending on what the thought/image is about.
36. I pay attention to how my emotions affect my thoughts and behav-
ior.
37. I can usually describe how I feel at the moment in considerable
detail.
38. I find myself doing things without paying attention.
39. I disapprove of myself when I have irrational ideas.
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