Making peace with disliked others: the effects of a short loving-kindness meditation on implicit and explicit emotional evaluations

BMC Psychol. 2022 Apr 29;10(1):110. doi: 10.1186/s40359-022-00817-5.

Abstract

Background: The main goal of the study was to investigate the effects of a short loving-kindness meditation (LKM) on explicit and implicit evaluations of oneself and disliked public persons. We expected a more positive explicit and implicit evaluation of oneself and a disliked public person after the LKM and a mood improvement.

Methods: Before and after the implementation of a short LKM vs. imagery task, mood, explicit and implicit evaluations were analyzed in 69 students.

Results: Our results demonstrated only a reduction in negative and positive mood in both groups and regarding the explicit and implicit tasks, only a significant main effect of picture and a trend for the time*group interaction for mood, implicit and explicit attitudes with medium effect-sizes.

Conclusions: A possible influence of a short intervention on emotional evaluations should be treated with caution. The claim that a short loving-kindness meditation enhances social connectedness might awake false hopes. This study suggests being careful with the interpretation of single meditation effects and future studies should examine the effects of a long-lasting meditation training on explicit and implicit evaluations of the self and disliked politicians as well as the sustainability of those effects.

Keywords: Affective priming; Explicit attitudes; Imagery; Implicit attitudes; Loving-kindness meditation.

MeSH terms

  • Affect
  • Emotions
  • Humans
  • Meditation* / methods