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How is Mindfulness Linked to Negative and Positive Affect? Rumination as an Explanatory Process in a Prospective Longitudinal Study of Adolescents
- Source :
- Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 49:2136-2148
- Publication Year :
- 2020
- Publisher :
- Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.
-
Abstract
- Research shows greater mindfulness is associated with less negative affect and more positive affect. Fewer studies have examined the mediating psychological processes linking mindfulness to these outcomes in adolescents. This three-wave, prospective longitudinal study examines rumination—the tendency to engage in repetitive and negative self-focused thinking—as one potential explanatory process. High school students (N = 599, Mage = 16.3 years; 49% girls) completed a short-form version of the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, in addition to self-report measures of rumination and negative and positive affect three times over the course of a school year. Autoregressive, cross-lagged panel models tested reciprocal, prospective associations between mindfulness, rumination, and negative and positive affect, while accounting for prior levels of each construct, within-wave covariances, and gender and grade level. The results showed that the nonjudgment mindfulness facet (and the total mindfulness score) predicted cross-wave reductions in rumination, that in turn predicted cross-wave reductions in negative affect. No evidence for mediation was found for positive affect, or for any of the other mindfulness facets (describe, acting with awareness, and nonreactivity). This study provides suggestive evidence that individual differences in mindfulness, and in particular nonjudgmental acceptance, prospectively predict less negative affect through lower rumination.
- Subjects :
- Longitudinal study
Mediation (statistics)
Mindfulness
Adolescent
Social Psychology
Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire
Poison control
050109 social psychology
Affect (psychology)
Education
Developmental and Educational Psychology
medicine
Humans
0501 psychology and cognitive sciences
Longitudinal Studies
Prospective Studies
05 social sciences
Facial Expression
Health psychology
Attitude
Rumination
Female
Self Report
medicine.symptom
Psychology
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
050104 developmental & child psychology
Clinical psychology
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15736601 and 00472891
- Volume :
- 49
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Youth and Adolescence
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....49e8245ffdd33fb7cd1063e744ed4572