Higher trait mindfulness is associated with empathy but not with emotion recognition abilities
- PMID: 32968498
- PMCID: PMC7481693
- DOI: 10.1098/rsos.192077
Higher trait mindfulness is associated with empathy but not with emotion recognition abilities
Abstract
Mindfulness involves an intentional and non-judgemental attention or awareness of present-moment experiences. It can be cultivated by meditation practice or present as an inherent disposition or trait. Higher trait mindfulness has been associated with improved emotional skills, but evidence comes primarily from studies on emotion regulation. It remains unclear whether improvements extend to other aspects of emotional processing, namely the ability to recognize emotions in others. In the current study, 107 participants (M age = 25.48 years) completed a measure of trait mindfulness, the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, and two emotion recognition tasks. These tasks required participants to categorize emotions in facial expressions and in speech prosody (modulations of the tone of voice). They also completed an empathy questionnaire and attention tasks. We found that higher trait mindfulness was associated positively with cognitive empathy, but not with the ability to recognize emotions. In fact, Bayesian analyses provided substantial evidence for the null hypothesis, both for emotion recognition in faces and in speech. Moreover, no associations were observed between mindfulness and attention performance. These findings suggest that the positive effects of trait mindfulness on emotional processing do not extend to emotion recognition abilities.
Keywords: emotion; empathy; faces; speech prosody; trait mindfulness.
© 2020 The Authors.
Conflict of interest statement
César F. Lima was a member of the Royal Society Open Science editorial board at the time of submission; however, they were not involved in the editorial assessment of the manuscript in any way.
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