Authors
Daniel R Berry, Athena H Cairo, Robert J Goodman, Jordan T Quaglia, Jeffrey D Green, Kirk Warren Brown
Publication date
2018/1
Journal
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
Volume
147
Issue
1
Pages
93
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Four studies tested the proposition that mindfulness and its training fostered prosociality toward ostracized strangers. In discovery Study 1, dispositional mindfulness predicted greater empathic concern for, and more helping behavior toward, an ostracized stranger. Using an experimental design, Study 2 revealed that very briefly instructed mindfulness, relative to active control instructions, also promoted prosocial responsiveness to an ostracized stranger. Study 3 ruled out alternative explanations for this effect of mindfulness, showing that it did not promote empathic anger or perpetrator punishment, nor that the control training reduced prosocial responsiveness toward an ostracized stranger rather than mindfulness increasing it. Study 4 further ruled out the alternative explanation of relaxation in the experimental effects of mindfulness. In all studies, empathic concern mediated the relation between mindfulness and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
DR Berry, AH Cairo, RJ Goodman, JT Quaglia… - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2018