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No effect of focused attention and open monitoring meditation on EEG auditory mismatch negativity in expert and novice practitioners.

Authors :
Fucci, Enrico
Poublan-Couzardot, Arnaud
Abdoun, Oussama
Lutz, Antoine
Source :
International Journal of Psychophysiology. Jun2022, Vol. 176, p62-72. 11p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The auditory mismatch negativity (MMN) is a well characterized event-related potential component which has gained recent attention in theoretical models describing the impact of various styles of mindfulness meditation on attentional processes and perceptual inference. Previous findings highlighted a distinct modulation of the MMN amplitude by different meditation practices and degrees of expertise. In the present study, we attempted to replicate results from the recent literature with a data sample that allowed for increased statistical power compared to previous experiments. Relying on traditional frequentist analysis, we found no effect of focused attention and open monitoring meditation on the auditory MMN amplitude compared to a control condition (silent movie) in expert or novice practitioners (all p > 0.17), providing a non-replication of our previous work (Fucci et al. 2018). Using a Bayesian approach, we found strong evidence against an interaction effect on the MMN amplitude between expertise groups and meditation practices (BF 01 = 11.0), strong evidence against effects of either meditation practices compared to the control condition (BF 01 between 11.9 and 16.1) and moderate evidence against an effect of expertise during meditation (BF 01 between 5.3 and 7.9). On the other hand, we replicated previous evidence of increased alpha oscillatory power during meditation practices compared to a control state (p < 0.001). We discuss our null findings in relation to factors that could undermine the replicability of previous research on this subject, namely low statistical power, use of flexible analysis methods and a possible publication bias leading to a misrepresentation of the available evidence. • We attempted to replicate previous findings on the effect of different meditation styles on the auditory MMN. • We found no effect of meditation on the auditory MMN using frequentist analysis. • Bayesian analysis yields moderate to strong evidence against effects of meditation practice and expertise. • Null findings are discussed in relation to factors undermining research replicability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01678760
Volume :
176
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Psychophysiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
157418205
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2022.03.010