"Trait mindfulness is associated with enhanced daily affectivity and co" by Yi Jing CHUA, Andree HARTANTO et al.
 

Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

publishedVersion

Publication Date

4-2025

Abstract

Trait mindfulness has been linked to various adaptive outcomes, including attenuated affective and cognitive responses to laboratory-induced stress. However, the role of trait mindfulness as a resilience factor against daily stressors exposures is less established. Across 2 studies, multilevel analysis was used to examine the relationships between trait mindfulness and daily affect and cognition, as well as affective and cognitive reactivity to and recovery from everyday stressor exposure. Trait mindfulness was significantly associated with higher daily positive affect in both studies, lower negative affect and cognitive failure, and lower cognitive reactivity to daily stressor exposure in Study 2. However, trait mindfulness did not attenuate cognitive reactivity in Study 1, nor affective reactivity to daily stressor exposure and affective and cognitive recovery from previous-day stressor exposure in both studies. Overall, results suggest that the mechanisms underlying the affective and cognitive buffering effect of trait mindfulness are not stress specific.

Keywords

Daily stressor exposure, Trait mindfulness, Positive affect, Negative affect, Cognitive failure

Discipline

Cognitive Psychology | Social Psychology

Publication

Personality and Individual Differences

Volume

237

First Page

1

Last Page

15

ISSN

0191-8869

Identifier

10.1016/j.paid.2025.113044

Publisher

Elsevier

Copyright Owner and License

Authors-CC-BY

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2025.113044

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