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Citation

Examining emotion reactivity to politically polarizing media in a randomized controlled trial of mindfulness training versus active coping training

Author:
Rahrig, Hadley; Beloborodova, Polina; Castro, Christina; Sabet, Kayla; Johnson, Melina; Pearce, Orion; Celik, Elif; Brown, Kirk Warren
Publication:
Scientific Reports
Year:
2025

Emotional appraisals of political stimuli (e.g., videos) have been shown to drive shared neural encoding, which correspond to shared, yet divisive, interpretations of such stimuli. However, mindfulness practice may entrain a form of emotion regulation that de-automatizes social biases, possibly through alteration of such neural mechanisms. The present study combined a naturalistic neuroimaging paradigm and a randomized controlled trial to examine the effects of short-term mindfulness training (MT) (n = 35) vs structurally equivalent Cognitive Reappraisal training (CT) (n = 37) on politically-situated emotions while evaluating the mechanistic role of prefrontal cortical neural synchrony. Participants underwent functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) recording while viewing inflammatory partisan news clips and continuously rating their momentary discrete emotions. MT participants were more likely to respond with extreme levels of anger (odds ratio = 0.12, p < 0.001) and disgust (odds ratio = 0.08, p  MT; channel 1 ISC = 0.040, p = 0.030).