Cultivating Concern for Others: Meditation Training and Motivated Engagement With Human Suffering

Brandon G. King, Anthony P. Zanesco, Alea C. Skwara, Clifford D. Saron

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Contemplative traditions have long affirmed that compassion and kindness are trainable skills. While research on meditation practice has recently flourished, the mechanisms that might engender such changes are still poorly understood. Here, we present a motivational framework to explain why meditation training should increase concern for others and modulate empathic engagement with human suffering over time. Meditation practices are conceived as tools for enacting cognitive and emotion regulatory goals that are conditioned by the underlying ethical motivation of the training—to reduce and alleviate suffering. In support of this account, we present data from a randomized, wait-list-controlled study of intensive meditation. In Study 1, we use a novel cardiovascular index to show that 3 months of meditation training can increase the motivational salience of others’ suffering, as compared to the salience of threats to oneself. In Study 2, we demonstrate that training-related changes in the ability to orient attention to suffering are mediated by the dynamic regulation of distress-related physiological arousal. Finally, in Study 3, we provide exploratory evidence suggesting that meditation training may influence how human suffering is encoded in memory, leaving lasting imprints on the recollection of emotional experience. Together, our findings suggest that meditation training can strengthen the motivational relevance of others’suffering, prompting a shift from self-focused to other-focused evaluative processing. Considering meditation training from a motivational standpoint offers an important perspective for understanding how compassion can be cultivated through intentional practice.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2897-2924
Number of pages28
JournalJournal of Experimental Psychology: General
Volume152
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - May 11 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Psychological Association

Funding

This research was supported by the Fetzer Institute (Grant 2191) and John Templeton Foundation (Grant 39970); the Santa Barbara Institute for Consciousness Studies; and gifts from the Hershey Family, the Baumann, Tan Teo, Yoga Science, and Mental Insight Foundations, and anonymous and other donors to Clifford Saron. We are grateful to Stephen Aichele, David Bridwell, Tonya Jacobs, Katherine MacLean, Baljinder Sahdra, Phillip Shaver, and B. Alan Wallace for their many contributions to the study. We also thank Paul Grossman and Jens Blechert for their guidance in physiological data analysis.

FundersFunder number
Clifford Saron
Hershey Family Foundation
Mental Insight Foundations
Santa Barbara Institute for Consciousness Studies
John Templeton Foundation39970
John Templeton Foundation
Fetzer Institute2191
Fetzer Institute

    Keywords

    • emotional memory
    • empathy
    • human suffering
    • meditation
    • motivation

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
    • General Psychology
    • Developmental Neuroscience

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