Mindfulness and technology is a movement in research and design, that encourages the user to become aware of the present moment, rather than losing oneself in a technological device. This field encompasses multidisciplinary participation between design, psychology, computer science, and religion. Mindfulness stems from Buddhist meditation practices and refers to the awareness that arises through paying attention on purpose in the present moment, and in a non-judgmental mindset. In the field of Human-Computer Interaction, research is being done on Techno-spirituality — the study of how technology can facilitate feelings of awe, wonder, transcendence, and mindfulness [1] and on Slow design,[2][3] which facilitates self-reflection. The excessive use of personal devices, such as smartphones and laptops, can lead to the deterioration of mental and physical health.[4] This area focuses on redesigning and creating technology to improve the wellbeing of its users.
Mindfulness theory
editIn 1979, Jon Kabat-Zinn founded the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program at the University of Massachusetts to treat the chronically ill.[5] He is noted[by whom?] to be responsible for the popularization of mindfulness in Western culture. The program uses a combination of mindfulness meditation, body awareness, and yoga. These practices derived from teachings of the Eastern World, specifically Buddhist traditions. Researchers found that enhanced mindfulness through the program partly mediated the association[which?] between increased daily spiritual experiences and improved mental-health-related quality of life.[6][need quotation to verify]
Early studies of mindfulness focused on health issues related to psychosomatic and psychiatric disorders,[7] while later studies of mindfulness explore the business sector, showing an increase in creativity and a decrease in burnout.[8] Studies on the relationship between mindfulness and technology are fairly new, with some of the more recent research highlighting the importance the practice plays in safety.[8]
Technology
editNeurofeedback
editNeurofeedback, also known as EEG biofeedback, is a non-invasive technique that uses real-time displays of brain activity to teach self-regulation of brain function. It involves placing sensors on the scalp to monitor brainwave patterns, which are then displayed on a computer screen. This real-time feedback facilitates operant conditioning, enhancing mindfulness and meditation practices.
Research has shown that combining neurofeedback with mindfulness practices can significantly enhance the benefits of both approaches. Neurofeedback helps individuals maintain optimal brainwave patterns during mindfulness exercises, improving their ability to achieve and sustain a state of non-judgmental awareness. This combination has been associated with improved emotional regulation, reduced stress, and better cognitive function.[9]
Studies have also investigated the use of neurofeedback-augmented mindfulness training (NAMT) in clinical settings. For instance, a randomized controlled trial is examining the effectiveness of real-time fMRI neurofeedback combined with mindfulness practice for adolescents with major depressive disorder (MDD). This study aims to determine the optimal duration and dosing of these interventions to maximize their therapeutic effects.[10]
Software and Meditation
editVarious desktop and mobile applications aid users in practicing mindfulness, including Calm, Headspace, Insight Timer, Buddhify, and Yours App. Research supports the efficacy of these applications. A randomized controlled trial demonstrated that using a mindfulness meditation app can alleviate acute stress and improve mood, potentially offering long-term benefits for attentional control.[11]
Additionally, studies have shown that meditation can change brain activity and reduce emotional reactivity. A 2012 study published in *Frontiers in Human Neuroscience* found that Mindful Attention training can down-regulate emotional reactivity, with changes in brain activity persisting in everyday life, not just during meditation.[12] Furthermore, a 2011 brain imaging study published in the *Journal of Neuroscience* found that even brief mindfulness meditation instruction (four 20-minute sessions) effectively relieved pain by reducing the brain's emotional response to painful stimuli.[13]
To help make meditation and mindfulness more accessible, developers have created digital health platforms such as Am Mindfulness, Headspace, Insight Timer, and Buddhify. Notably, Am Mindfulness is the only commercially available meditation app that has outperformed placebos in randomized controlled trials.[11]
Mindfulness Bell
editAccording to Vietnamese Zen teacher Thich Nhat Hanh, the ringing of a bell every 15 minutes[14] is an effective way to cultivate the mindfulness practice and connect back with the body. The Mindfulness Bell and Mindful Mynah applications simulate the bell on the user's personal device.
Wearables
editThere are several wearables which measures the breath in order to connect the user back to their body. Wo.Defy is a dress which attempts to reveal the beauty of emotional communication using the common platform of the human breath; proposing the best methods of human to human communication lie within us.[15] Spire measures your breathing patterns to give you insights into your state of mind.[16] Being, the mindfulness tracker from Zensorium, maps user's emotions (stressed, excited normal and calm) through heart rate variability.[17] WellBe monitors heart rate levels and then matches them, through a patent pending algorithm, to specific moments and interactions throughout a user's day.[17] SmartMat is a responsive mat embedded with 21,000 sensors to detect your body's balance, pressure and alignment.[17] Prana's platform evaluates breath patterns, takes into account the effects of posture on breathing, and differentiates between diaphragmatic and chest breathing, three critical components of assessing the true quality of breathing, previously unaddressed by systems such as spirometers or pulse oximeters.[18]
Virtual Reality
editSonic Cradle enables users to shape sound with their breath while suspended in a completely dark chamber.[19] The researchers conducted a qualitative study with 39 participants to show how persuasive media has the potential to promote long-term psychological health by experientially introducing a stress-relieving, contemplative practice to non-practitioners.[19]
Because the nature of chronic pain is complex, pharmacological analgesics are often not enough to achieve an ideal treatment plan. The system incorporates biofeedback sensors, an immersive virtual environment, and stereoscopic sound titled the "Virtual Meditative Walk" (VMW). It was designed to enable chronic pain patients to learn Mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR), a form of meditation. By providing real-time visual and sonic feedback, VMW enables patients to learn how to manage their pain.[20]
Techno-spirituality
editIntel anthropologist Genevieve Bell has urged the human-computer interaction (HCI) research community to devote more research to the use of technology in spirituality and religion. Techno-spirituality is the study of how technology can facilitate feelings of awe, wonder, transcendence, and mindfulness.[1] Currently, there are 6,000 applications related to spirituality and religion. This area is in high demand and “important under-explored areas of HCI research”.[21]
Inspired by Bell's work, researchers (Sterling & Zimmerman) focused on how mobile phones could be incorporated in American Soto Zen Buddhist community, without conflicting with their philosophy of “the here and the now”. They were able to find three ways to use technology to help strengthen ties within the community.[22]
Interaction Design
editSlow Design
editSlow design is a design agenda for technology aimed at reflection and moments of mental rest rather than efficiency in performance.[2]
Mindful Design
editMindful design, based on Langer’s theory of mindfulness,[23][24] is a design philosophy that incorporates the idea of mindfulness into creating meaningful user oriented design. A major tenant is the behavior change of a user through awareness and responsibility of meaningful interactions between user and designed object, and this will encourage more desirable human practices.[25] This type of mind behavior driven change has been most heavily incorporated design for sustainability. Other approaches include crime prevention or health. It is also seen in the design of safety objects and the social interaction of performative objects.
Performative objects are identified as design objects that are designed to facilitate mindful awareness of the physical and symbolic social actions and their consequences within which they are used.[26]
Mindfulness and Silicon Valley
editSeveral major tech companies in Silicon Valley have incorporated mindfulness practices into their workplace culture. For example, Google offers bimonthly "mindfulness lunches" and has constructed a labyrinth for walking meditations. Similarly, Twitter and Facebook have integrated contemplative practices into their employee programs. These initiatives aim to enhance communication and develop the emotional intelligence of employees.[27]
Internet Addiction and Mindfulness
editMindfulness is currently being explored by researchers as a possible treatment for technological addiction, also known as Internet addiction disorder, a form of behavioral addiction. There has been some consensus in the field of psychology on the benefits of using mindfulness to treat behavioral addiction.[28] Experts in the field say in order to treat technology addiction with mindfulness, one must be non-judgmental about the behavior and pay attention in order to recognize instances in which technology is being used mindlessly. Then reflect on the helpfulness of the device, and notice the benefits of disconnecting.[29] The three keystones of mindfulness are: Intention, Attention and Action.[29] Technology is said to interfere with mindfulness by causing the individual to forget what matters (intention), the distracts (attention), and then keeps the individual from taking action.[29]
In technological addiction, the reward system, located in the mid-brain and underlies addiction, evolved to rewards finding and consuming food. In complex animals this evolution also rewards the exchange of information within the social group. In humans this has developed into its current form of mass worldwide communication.[30] The exchange of social information has demonstrated reward based reinforcement, similar to that of gamification.[30]
Criticisms
editCritics argue that mindfulness in technology can lead to technophobia, pacification of workplace grievances, and disconnection from religious roots. Some view the movement as a marketing tactic rather than a genuine solution to technological overuse. Others are concerned about the secularization of mindfulness, fearing it may dilute its traditional Buddhist values.
Mobile
editMobile meditation applications like Calm, Headspace and MyLife have over a million users and are increasing in popularity. Swedish Researchers found that downloading and using the applications for eight weeks made little to no difference for people with major depression and anxiety. They did, however, see improvements with a subgroup with mild levels of depression.[31] Mindfulness apps are also associated with a range of challenges to engagement.[32]
Disconnectionists
editCriticisms of the slow technology movement are similar to the slow-food movement; it lacks understanding of global scope, and as an individualistic response will not answer the actual problems in technology. This movement has been dubbed by critics as disconnectionists.[33] Mindfulness in technology has been criticized as being less about restoring self and more about stifling autonomy that technology inspires. Anti-disconnectionists state mindfulness and the expressed need to disconnect from technology and the modern world can be accused of being a nostalgia-manipulating marketing tactic and maybe a technological form of conservatism. Critics state that the labeling of digital connection as debasing and unnatural is in direct proportion to the rapidity of adoption.[33][34] Thus it is depicted as a dangerous desire and toxin to be regulated. This argument itself can be tied back to rationalization, Walter Benjamin on aura, Jacques Ellul on technique, Jean Baudrillard on simulations, or Zygmunt Bauman and the Frankfurt School on modernity and the Enlightenment. Critics state that disconnectionists see the Internet as having normalized or enforced a repression of an authentic self in favor of a social media avatar.[33] Thus reflecting the desire to connect with a deeper self, which may itself be an illusion. The pathologization of technology use then opens the door for Foucault's idea of "normalization" to be applied to technology in similar fashion as other social ills, which then can become a concept around which social control and management can be applied.
Buddhist concerns
editThere is some concern among Buddhist practitioners that decoupling meditation and mindfulness from the core tenement of Buddhism may have negative effects. The wide adoption of mindfulness in technology and the tech industry has been accused of increasing passivity in the worker by creating a calm mindstate which then allows for disconnection from actual grievances.[35] Critics of mindfulness in Cognitive Behavior Therapy also comment on this as a possible problem.[33] However, critics of the movement, such as Ronald Purser, fear that the secularization of mindfulness, dubbed McMindfulness,[36] leads to reinforcement of anti-Buddhist ideas. Buddhists differentiate between Right Mindfulness (samma sati) and Wrong Mindfulness (miccha sati). The distinction is not moralistic: the issue is whether the quality of awareness is characterized by wholesome intentions and positive mental qualities that lead to human flourishing and optimal well-being for others as well as oneself. Mindfulness as adopted by the Silicon Valley tech giants has been criticized as conveniently shifting the burden of stress and toxic work environment onto the individual employee. Obfuscated by the seemingly inherent qualities of care and humanity, mindfulness is refashioned into a way of coping with and adapting to the stresses and strains of corporate life rather than actually solving them.[36]
See also
editReferences
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- ^ a b Hallnäs, L.; Redström, J. (2001). "Slow technology–designing for reflection". Personal and Ubiquitous Computing. 5 (3): 201–212. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.22.9377. doi:10.1007/pl00000019. S2CID 11108465.
- ^ Barbara Grosse-Hering, Jon Mason, Dzmitry Aliakseyeu, Conny Bakker, and Pieter Desmet. 2013. Slow design for meaningful interactions. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '13). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 3431-3440. doi:10.1145/2470654.2466472
- ^ Faiola, Anthony; Srinivas, Preethi (2014-01-01). "Extreme mediation". Proceedings of the 2014 ACM International Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing: Adjunct Publication. UbiComp '14 Adjunct. New York, NY, USA: ACM. pp. 47–50. doi:10.1145/2638728.2638741. ISBN 978-1-4503-3047-3. S2CID 11815056.
- ^ "Stress Reduction". University of Massachusetts Medical School. Archived from the original on 2015-06-17. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
- ^ Greeson, Jeffrey M.; Webber, Daniel M.; Smoski, Moria J.; Brantley, Jeffrey G.; Ekblad, Andrew G.; Suarez, Edward C.; Wolever, Ruth Quillian (2011-12-01). "Changes in spirituality partly explain health-related quality of life outcomes after Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction". Journal of Behavioral Medicine. 34 (6): 508–518. doi:10.1007/s10865-011-9332-x. ISSN 0160-7715. PMC 3151546. PMID 21360283.
[...] an alternate model suggested that enhanced mindfulness partly mediated the association between increased daily spiritual experiences and improved mental health-related quality of life [...].
- ^ Grossman, Paul; Niemann, Ludger; Schmidt, Stefan; Walach, Harald (2004). "Mindfulness-based stress reduction and health benefits". Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 57 (1): 35–43. doi:10.1016/S0022-3999(03)00573-7. PMID 15256293.
- ^ a b Moldoveanu, Mihnea; Langer, Ellen J. (2000-01-01). "The Construct of Mindfulness". Journal of Social Issues. 56 (1): 1–9. doi:10.1111/0022-4537.00148. ISSN 1540-4560.
- ^ VeryBigBrain. "Mindfulness and Neurofeedback: A Powerful Combination for Brain Health". Retrieved 2024-06-07.
- ^ Vidyarthi, Jay; Riecke, Bernhard E. "Mindfulness-based real-time fMRI neurofeedback: a randomized controlled trial to optimize dosing for depressed adolescents". BMC Psychiatry. Retrieved 2024-06-07.
- ^ a b Farb, Norman AS; Saab, Bechara J.; Walsh, Kathleen Marie (2019). "Effects of a Mindfulness Meditation App on Subjective Well-Being: Active Randomized Controlled Trial and Experience Sampling Study". JMIR Mental Health. 6 (1): e10844. doi:10.2196/10844. PMC 6329416. PMID 30622094.
- ^ Desbordes, Gaëlle (2012). "Effects of mindful-attention and compassion meditation training on amygdala response to emotional stimuli in an ordinary, non-meditative state". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 6. Fullmind: 292. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2012.00292. PMC 3485650. PMID 23125828. Retrieved 24 September 2021.
- ^ "The 8 Best Meditation Apps For Unwinding -- On The Go!". The Huffington Post. 19 March 2013. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
- ^ "Mindfulness Software | Plum Village". plumvillage.org. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^ "wo.DEFY". wo.DEFY. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^ "Spire is the first wearable to track body, breath, and state of mind". www.spire.io. Retrieved 2015-11-10.
- ^ a b c "5 pieces of wearable tech for meditation & mindfulness". The Next Web. 10 October 2015. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
- ^ "Prana".
- ^ a b Jay Vidyarthi and Bernhard E. Riecke. 2013. Mediated meditation: cultivating mindfulness with sonic cradle. In CHI '13 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI EA '13). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 2305-2314. doi:10.1145/2468356.2468753
- ^ Diane Gromala, Xin Tong, Amber Choo, Mehdi Karamnejad, and Chris D. Shaw. 2015. The Virtual Meditative Walk: Virtual Reality Therapy for Chronic Pain Management. In Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '15). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 521-524. doi:10.1145/2702123.2702344
- ^ Buie, Elizabeth; Blythe, Mark (2013-01-01). "Spirituality: There's an app for that! (But not a lot of research)". CHI '13 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems. CHI EA '13. New York, NY, USA: ACM. pp. 2315–2324. doi:10.1145/2468356.2468754. ISBN 978-1-4503-1952-2. S2CID 15980775.
- ^ Sterling, Rhiannon; Zimmerman, John (2007-01-01). "Shared moments". Proceedings of the 2007 conference on Designing for User eXperiences. DUX '07. New York, NY, USA: ACM. pp. 15:2–15:7. doi:10.1145/1389908.1389928. ISBN 978-1-60558-308-2. S2CID 3041944.
- ^ Langer, E.J. Mindfulness. New York: Addison Wesley Publishing Company.
- ^ Langer, E.J. Counterclockwise. London: Hodder and Stoughton.
- ^ Niedderer, K. (2013). "Mindful Design as a Driver for Social Behaviour Change" (PDF). Consilience and Innovation in Design - Proceedings of the 5th International IASDR.
- ^ Niedderer, K. (2004). Designing the Performative Object: a study in designing mindful interaction through artefacts, in Redmond, J., D. Durling, and A. de Bono (eds.). Melbourne, Australia: Monash University: FutureGround Proceedings of the Design Research Society International Conference 2004, Volume 2. ISBN 978-0-9756060-5-6.
- ^ Shachtman, Noah (18 June 2013). "In Silicon Valley, Meditation Is No Fad. It Could Make Your Career". WIRED. Retrieved 2015-11-30.
- ^ "Mindfulness as a treatment for behavioural-addiction" (PDF).
- ^ a b c "Mindful Use of Technology". Archived from the original on 2015-11-19.
- ^ a b "The Effects of Feedback on Human Behavior in Social Media: An Inverse Reinforcement Learning Model" (PDF).
- ^ "Seeking Serenity on a Screen". Well. 10 March 2014. Retrieved 2015-12-06.
- ^ Osborne, Emma (2023). "Ms". Journal of Medical Internet Research. 20: 20. doi:10.2196/44220. PMC 10570895. PMID 37768709. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
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- ^ Berger, Jonah; Mens, Gaël Le (2009-05-19). "How adoption speed affects the abandonment of cultural tastes". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 106 (20): 8146–8150. Bibcode:2009PNAS..106.8146B. doi:10.1073/pnas.0812647106. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 2688844. PMID 19416813.
- ^ "Mindfulness is not Sati?". Theravadin. 13 February 2009. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
- ^ a b "Beyond McMindfulness". The Huffington Post. July 2013. Retrieved 2015-11-11.
External links
edit- Mindful.technology Articles and resources on mindfulness and technology including reviews of books on the topic