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A space to explore, share and shape the issues facing social and behavioral scientists
The popularization of mindfulness, write Daniel Nehring and Ashley Frawley, cannot just be understood as a recent response to public perceptions of a mental health crisis. Rather, it is the result of developments in academic psychology, in its clinical uses in psychotherapy, and in its growing commercial exploitation from the 1980s onwards.
4 years agoMindfulness training can help individuals increase their attention and awareness, but how can this present-centered mindset help in the workplace? The recent article […]
7 years ago[We are pleased to welcome Ronald Purser. who collaborated with Joseph Milillo on their article entitled “Mindfulness Revisited: A Buddhist-Based […]
9 years ago