명상도서관
Mindfulness Meditation-Based Pain Relief Employs Different Neural Mechanisms Than Placebo and Sham Mindfulness Meditation-Induced Analgesia
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- 자료유형학술지논문
- 저자명Zeidan, Fadel,Emerson, Nichole M.,Farris, Suzan R.,Ray, Jenna N.,Jung, Youngkyoo,McHaffie, John G.,Coghill, Robert C.
- 학회/출판사/기관명Society for Neuroscience
- 출판년도2015
- 언어영어
- 학술지명/학위논문주기The Journal of neuroscience
- 발행사항Vol.35No.46[2015]_x000D_
- ISBN/ISSN0270-6474
- 소개/요약The subjective experience of pain is constructed and modulated by complex, multidimensional interactions between sensory, affective, and cognitive factors, making its treatment both challenging and costly. Mindfulness meditation, a cognitive practice based on developing nonjudgmental awareness of arising sensory events, has been shown repeatedly to alleviate pain across experimental and clinical settings (Kabat-Zinn, 1982; Kabat-Zinn et al., 1985; Grant and Rainville, 2009; Brown and Jones, 2010; Zeidan et al., 2010a; Gard et al., 2012; Garland et al., 2012; Grant et al., 2011; Zeidan et al., 2011; MacCoon et al., 2012; Lutz et al., 2013). However, the utilization of mindfulness meditation is limited in part because of poor reproducibility of research findings and questions related to mechanistic underpinnings (Tang et al., 2015). For example, mindfulness meditation could simply reduce pain through mechanisms that mediate placebo analgesia, such as conditioning effects (Colloca et al., 2010; Lui et al., 2010). The analgesic effects of meditation could also be driven by the nonspecific components of participating in a meditation intervention. Such components would include psychosocial contexts, facilitator attention, intervention setting, body posture, and/or demand characteristics associated with the belief that one is practicing meditation (Salomons and Kucyi, 2011; Zeidan et al., 2012; Tang et al., 2015).
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