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Meditation Experience Predicts Introspective Accuracy
Authors:Kieran C. R. Fox  Pierre Zakarauskas  Matt Dixon  Melissa Ellamil  Evan Thompson  Kalina Christoff
Affiliation:1. Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.; 2. Brain Research Centre, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.; 3. Department of Philosophy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.; CSIC-Univ Miguel Hernandez, Spain,
Abstract:The accuracy of subjective reports, especially those involving introspection of one''s own internal processes, remains unclear, and research has demonstrated large individual differences in introspective accuracy. It has been hypothesized that introspective accuracy may be heightened in persons who engage in meditation practices, due to the highly introspective nature of such practices. We undertook a preliminary exploration of this hypothesis, examining introspective accuracy in a cross-section of meditation practitioners (1–15,000 hrs experience). Introspective accuracy was assessed by comparing subjective reports of tactile sensitivity for each of 20 body regions during a ‘body-scanning’ meditation with averaged, objective measures of tactile sensitivity (mean size of body representation area in primary somatosensory cortex; two-point discrimination threshold) as reported in prior research. Expert meditators showed significantly better introspective accuracy than novices; overall meditation experience also significantly predicted individual introspective accuracy. These results suggest that long-term meditators provide more accurate introspective reports than novices.
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