Effects of Mindfulness Training on Memories of Personal Past Events

Overview

The purpose of the study was to assess the effects of participation in an online Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program on everyday memories of personal past events in individuals with depression vulnerability. Previous research has demonstrated that individuals with depression experience various difficulties when thinking about personal past events, such as more intense negative emotions, difficulties in regulating their emotions, and difficulties in recalling highly contextualized and detailed events. Some of these difficulties may continue following recovery from depression and as such may constitute a vulnerability for recurring depression. Other studies have found that mindfulness-based interventions (MBIs) may influence how people experience and regulate their emotions, and certain aspects of how people remember personal past events. Therefore, it is possible that MBIs may also influence how individuals with depression vulnerability emotionally process memories of personal past events. In the present study participants with a history of depression were allocated to either an 8-week online MBSR condition where participants were introduced to and engaged in different mindfulness practices, or a waitlist-control condition, where participants did not receive any active training or treatment. In order to assess the effects of the MBSR program on everyday memories of personal past events participants were asked to complete a memory diary in which participants recorded both spontaneously arising and word-cued memories of personal past events in everyday life, before and after participating in the MBSR program or the waitlist-control condition. The investigators hypothesized that participants in the MBSR condition would report reduced difficulties related to memories of personal past events compared to the waitlist-control group, including how participants emotionally process these memories. The investigators predicted that these effects would be greater for spontaneously occurring memories than for voluntary memories, since previous research comparing individuals with different levels of mindfulness skills suggests that mindfulness may be especially beneficial for influencing emotion regulation in response to memories that come to mind spontaneously.

Full Title of Study: “Effects of Mindfulness Training on Autobiographical Memory”

Study Type

  • Study Type: Interventional
  • Study Design
    • Allocation: Randomized
    • Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment
    • Primary Purpose: Treatment
    • Masking: None (Open Label)
  • Study Primary Completion Date: June 14, 2020

Detailed Description

PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: I. Determine the effects of an online, self-directed Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program on emotion regulation in response to everyday involuntary and voluntary (word-cued) autobiographical memories in individuals with a history of depression SECONDARY AND EXPLORATORY OBJECTIVES: I. Determine whether an online, self-directed MBSR program performs similar to MBIs in previous studies in terms of effects on depression symptoms, trait mindfulness, and trait emotion regulation; and whether the effects of this program are similar for trait and state measures of emotion regulation. II. Determine the effects of an online, self-directed MBSR program on additional aspects of involuntary and voluntary autobiographical memories in individuals with a history of depression, including memory specificity, centrality, and emotional experience in response to the memories. PARTICIPANT RECRUITMENT: Participant recruitment was done as part of a larger research project on mindfulness and autobiographical memory in depression vulnerability, which recruited both individuals with and without a depression history. The outlined study uses data from a sample of remitted depressed participants. STUDY OUTLINE: Participants were randomly allocated to either an 8-week active MBSR condition, or a waitlist-control condition. Participants in both conditions received information about mental health support organizations and student support options on campus following enrollment in the study. Participants assigned to the active MBSR intervention participated in an 8-week, self-directed MBSR program which is freely available online (www.palousemindfulness.com). This MBSR program consists of a guided body scan in week 1, guided sitting meditation in week 2, mindful yoga practices in week 3 and 4, meditation on difficult emotions in week 5, visualization meditation in week 6, lovingkindness meditation in week 7, and a silent meditation in week 8. Most mindfulness practices are planned to last approximately 30 minutes and participants are encouraged to engage in a mindfulness practice daily or as often as possible. In weeks 2 – 8 participants could choose to alternate the practice introduced each week with practices from previous weeks. In addition to the formal mindfulness practices described above, the MBSR program encourages participants to employ mindfulness in their daily lives and gives access to educative readings and videos related to the weekly mindfulness practices. Participants in the active intervention had immediate access to all MBSR practices on the website but were asked to complete the practices sequentially and in the order described above over a period of eight weeks. Participants in the waitlist-control condition did not receive any intervention during the trial, but were given a link to the MBSR program after completing the study. In order to determine the effects of the MBSR program on everyday autobiographical memories, all participants recorded everyday involuntary and voluntary (word-cued) autobiographical memories in a naturalistic memory diary, and rated the memories along several dimensions, including emotion regulation, emotional experience, memory specificity, and centrality. Participants also completed self-report measures of depression symptoms, trait mindfulness, trait emotion regulation, personal past events, and intervention adherence. HYPOTHESES PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: I. The investigators hypothesized that participants in the MBSR condition would show decreased memory suppression, expressive suppression, brooding, and reflection, and increased cognitive reappraisal and non-reactivity in response to autobiographical memories compared to the waitlist-control group. The investigators predicted that these effects would be greater for involuntary than for voluntary memories, since previous research on trait mindfulness and emotion regulation in response to autobiographical memories suggests that mindfulness skills may be especially beneficial for influencing emotion regulation in response to memories that come to mind involuntarily.

Interventions

  • Behavioral: Online Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR)
    • Participation in an 8-week MBSR program consisting of pre-recorded mindfulness practices, including a guided body scan in week 1, guided sitting meditation in week 2, mindful yoga practices in week 3 and 4, meditation on difficult emotions in week 5, visualization meditation in week 6, lovingkindness meditation in week 7, and a silent meditation in week 8. Most practices last approximately 30 minutes and participants were encouraged to engage in a mindfulness practice daily or as often as possible. In weeks 2 – 8 participants could choose to alternate the practice introduced each week with practices from previous weeks. Participants had immediate access to all practices but were asked to complete them sequentially and in the order described above over a period of eight weeks. The MBSR program also encourages participants to employ mindfulness in their daily lives, and gives access to educative readings and videos related to the weekly mindfulness practices.

Arms, Groups and Cohorts

  • Experimental: Active intervention condition
    • Participation in an 8-week, online, self-directed MBSR program.
  • No Intervention: Waitlist control condition
    • Participants in the waitlist control condition received no active intervention during the trial period but received a link to the MBSR program after completing the post-intervention assessments.

Clinical Trial Outcome Measures

Primary Measures

  • Change in the employment of emotion regulation strategies in response to everyday involuntary and voluntary autobiographical memories from baseline to post-intervention
    • Time Frame: Baseline to post-intervention, an average of 11 weeks
    • Self-rated (1 = Not at all, to 5 = A great deal) memory suppression (“I tried not to keep thinking about it”), expressive suppression (“I controlled my emotion by not expressing it”), reflection (“I analyzed the event to try to understand my feelings”), brooding (“I thought: Why do I always react this way?”, cognitive reappraisal (“I changed the way I was thinking about the situation”), and non-reactivity (“I noticed the memory and feelings without having to react to them”) in response to autobiographical memories was measured with a naturalistic memory diary method. Participants were asked to record and rate involuntary autobiographical memories in the memory diary immediately upon retrieval, over a period of up to five days or until they had recorded seven memories. For each involuntary memory recorded in the memory diary, participants were instructed to record and rate a word-cued (voluntary) memory when they had time later that day.

Secondary Measures

  • Change in depression symptoms from baseline to post-intervention
    • Time Frame: Baseline through study completion, an average of 11 weeks
    • Self-report measure: Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales (DASS)
  • Change in trait mindfulness from baseline to post-intervention
    • Time Frame: Baseline to post-intervention, an average of 11 weeks
    • Self-report measure: Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ)
  • Change in thought suppression from baseline to post-intervention
    • Time Frame: Baseline to post-intervention, an average of 11 weeks
    • Self-report measure: White Bear Suppression Inventory (WBSI)
  • Change in expressive suppression and cognitive reappraisal from baseline to post-intervention
    • Time Frame: Baseline to post-intervention, an average of 11 weeks
    • Self-report measure: Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ)
  • Change in rumination (brooding, reflection, overall) from baseline to post-intervention
    • Time Frame: Baseline to post-intervention, an average of 11 weeks
    • Self-report measure: Ruminative Response Scale (RRS)

Participating in This Clinical Trial

Inclusion Criteria

  • Native or fluent English speaker – Being 18-65 years old – At least one past major depressive episode Exclusion Criteria:

  • Current depressive episode

Gender Eligibility: All

Minimum Age: 18 Years

Maximum Age: 65 Years

Are Healthy Volunteers Accepted: No

Investigator Details

  • Lead Sponsor
    • Aleksandra Eriksen Isham
  • Collaborator
    • University of Aarhus
  • Provider of Information About this Clinical Study
    • Sponsor-Investigator: Aleksandra Eriksen Isham, PhD – University of St Andrews
  • Overall Official(s)
    • Barbara Dritschel, Principal Investigator, University of St Andrews

References

Isham AE, del Palacio-Gonzalez A, Dritschel B. Trait Mindfulness and Emotion Regulation upon Autobiographical Memory Retrieval during Depression Remission. Mindfulness. 2020;11(12):2828-40.

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