Skip to main content

Future Directions in Meditation Research: Recommendations for Expanding the Field of Contemplative Science

πŸ“„ Original study β†—
Vieten, C, Wahbeh, H, Cahn, B.R, MacLean, K, Estrada, M, Mills, P, Murphy, M, Shapiro, S, Radin, D.I, Josipovic, Z, Presti, D.E, Sapiro, M, Bays, J.C, Russell, P, Vago, D, Travis, F, Walsh, R, Delorme, A β€’ 2018 Current Era β€’ methodology

πŸ“Œ Appears in:

Plain English Summary

A massive international team of 18 researchers surveyed over 1,100 meditators from 66 countries β€” people who had been practicing for about 15 years on average β€” and asked what strange or extraordinary things they'd experienced during meditation. The results are eye-opening. Nearly everyone (91%) reported shifts in awareness, and a remarkable 56% said they'd experienced something like clairvoyance or telepathy (perceiving things beyond normal senses). That telepathy finding is especially striking because the longer someone had meditated, the more likely they were to report it. About a third even described physical phenomena happening around them. The study, backed by a four-year task force at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, argues that mainstream meditation science has been ignoring these widespread experiences and lays out six neglected research areas β€” from mystical experiences to difficult emotional episodes β€” that deserve serious scientific attention. All the data is publicly available for other researchers to dig into.

Actual Paper Abstract

The science of meditation has grown tremendously in the last two decades. Most studies have focused on evaluating the clinical effectiveness of mindfulness-based interventions, neural and other physiological correlates of meditation, and individual cognitive and emotional aspects of meditation. Far less research has been conducted on more challenging domains to measure, such as group and relational, transpersonal and mystical, and difficult aspects of meditation; anomalous or extraordinary phenomena related to meditation; and post-conventional stages of development associated with meditation. However, these components of meditation may be crucial to people's psychological and spiritual development, could represent important mediators and/or mechanisms by which meditation confers benefits, and could themselves be important outcomes of meditation practices. In addition, since large numbers of novices are being introduced to meditation, it is helpful to investigate experiences they may encounter that are not well understood. Over the last four years, a task force of meditation researchers and teachers met regularly to develop recommendations for expanding the current meditation research field to include these important yet often neglected topics. These meetings led to a cross-sectional online survey to investigate the prevalence of a wide range of experiences in 1120 meditators. Results show that the majority of respondents report having had many of these anomalous and extraordinary experiences. While some of the topics are potentially controversial, they can be subjected to rigorous scientific investigation. These arenas represent largely uncharted scientific terrain and provide excellent opportunities for both new and experienced researchers. We provide suggestions for future directions, with accompanying online materials to encourage such research.

Research Notes

The largest survey documenting anomalous experience prevalence in meditators. Key bridge paper between mainstream contemplative science and psi research β€” the finding that 56% of meditators report clairvoyance/telepathy provides population-level context for laboratory psi studies using meditator samples (IONS double-slit, presentiment, DMILS programs). 18 co-authors from the IONS Future of Meditation Research task force. Data openly available at OSF (https://osf.io/wubza/).

A cross-sectional online survey of 1,120 meditators (from 66 countries, mean 14.7 years practice) investigating the prevalence of extraordinary, mystical, and anomalous experiences during or related to meditation. Developed by a 4-year IONS task force of meditation researchers and teachers. Using the Revised Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ30) and newly developed items, found high prevalence of mystical experiences (MEQ30 subscales 3.26-3.71/5.0) and extraordinary phenomena: altered awareness (91%), synchronicities (82%), clairvoyance/telepathy (56%), external physical phenomena (31%), and disturbing emotions (32%). Clairvoyance/telepathy showed the strongest correlation with meditation practice length (r = .30). Provides recommendations for expanding meditation research into 6 under-studied domains: mystical/transcendent experiences, social/relational aspects, physical/perceptual phenomena, spatial/temporal phenomena, extended perception, and difficult experiences.

Links

Related Papers

Also by these authors

More in Methodology

πŸ“‹ Cite this paper
APA
Vieten, C, Wahbeh, H, Cahn, B.R, MacLean, K, Estrada, M, Mills, P, Murphy, M, Shapiro, S, Radin, D.I, Josipovic, Z, Presti, D.E, Sapiro, M, Bays, J.C, Russell, P, Vago, D, Travis, F, Walsh, R, Delorme, A (2018). Future Directions in Meditation Research: Recommendations for Expanding the Field of Contemplative Science. PLOS ONE. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205740
BibTeX
@article{vieten_2018_future,
  title = {Future Directions in Meditation Research: Recommendations for Expanding the Field of Contemplative Science},
  author = {Vieten, C and Wahbeh, H and Cahn, B.R and MacLean, K and Estrada, M and Mills, P and Murphy, M and Shapiro, S and Radin, D.I and Josipovic, Z and Presti, D.E and Sapiro, M and Bays, J.C and Russell, P and Vago, D and Travis, F and Walsh, R and Delorme, A},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {PLOS ONE},
  doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0205740},
}