» Articles » PMID: 37442873

A Meta-analytical Review of the Impact of Mindfulness on Creativity: Framing Current Lines of Research and Defining Moderator Variables

Overview
Specialty Psychology
Date 2023 Jul 13
PMID 37442873
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Findings relating to the impact of mindfulness interventions on creative performance remain inconsistent, perhaps because of discrepancies between study designs, including variability in the length of mindfulness interventions, the absence of control groups or the tendencies to explore creativity as one unitary construct. To derive a clearer understanding of the impact that mindfulness interventions may exert on creative performance, two meta-analytical reviews were conducted, drawing respectively on studies using a control group design (n = 20) and studies using a pretest-posttest design (n = 17). A positive effect was identified between mindfulness and creativity, both for control group designs (d = 0.42, 95% CIs [0.29, 0.54]) and pretest-posttest designs (d = 0.59, 95% CIs [0.38, 0.81]). Subgroup analysis revealed that intervention length, creativity task (i.e., divergent vs. convergent thinking tasks) and control group type, were significant moderators for control group studies, whereas only intervention length was a significant moderator for pretest-posttest studies. Overall, the findings support the use of mindfulness as a tool to enhance creative performance, with more advantageous outcomes for convergent as opposed to divergent thinking tasks. We discuss the implications of study design and intervention length as key factors of relevance to future research aimed at advancing theoretical accounts of the relationship between mindfulness and creativity.

Citing Articles

Advancing Emotionally Aware Child-Robot Interaction with Biophysical Data and Insight-Driven Affective Computing.

Faria D, Godkin A, da Silva Ayrosa P Sensors (Basel). 2025; 25(4).

PMID: 40006397 PMC: 11858965. DOI: 10.3390/s25041161.

References
1.
Dimitrov D, Rumrill Jr P . Pretest-posttest designs and measurement of change. Work. 2003; 20(2):159-65. View

2.
Li Y, Yang N, Zhang Y, Xu W, Cai L . The Relationship Among Trait Mindfulness, Attention, and Working Memory in Junior School Students Under Different Stressful Situations. Front Psychol. 2021; 12:558690. PMC: 7960675. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.558690. View

3.
McCarney R, Warner J, Iliffe S, Haselen R, Griffin M, Fisher P . The Hawthorne Effect: a randomised, controlled trial. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2007; 7:30. PMC: 1936999. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2288-7-30. View

4.
Bishop S . What do we really know about mindfulness-based stress reduction?. Psychosom Med. 2002; 64(1):71-83. DOI: 10.1097/00006842-200201000-00010. View

5.
Kiken L, Garland E, Bluth K, Palsson O, Gaylord S . From a state to a trait: Trajectories of state mindfulness in meditation during intervention predict changes in trait mindfulness. Pers Individ Dif. 2015; 81:41-46. PMC: 4404745. DOI: 10.1016/j.paid.2014.12.044. View