Jinyan Wang’s research while affiliated with Government of the People's Republic of China and other places

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Publications (21)


Chain‐mediated model of cognitive flexibility and self‐compassion. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
The cross‐lagged model of mindfulness and shame. *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
The Effects of Mindfulness on Shame: Exploring Mediation by Cognitive Flexibility and Self‐Compassion in a Chinese Adult Population
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December 2024

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34 Reads

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2 Citations

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Jinghong Wang

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To examine the effects of mindfulness on shame and the mechanisms mediated by cognitive flexibility and self‐compassion in a Chinese adult population in daily life, we conducted two studies. Study 1 was a cross‐sectional study using the Five‐Factor Mindfulness Questionnaire, the Cognitive Flexibility Inventory, the Self‐Compassion Scale, and the Self‐Conscious Affect‐3, which were administered to 481 adults in Beijing and Chengdu. For Study 2, an 8‐month follow‐up study was conducted on 128 of the adults. The results of Study 1 showed that (1) the awareness of action and nonjudgment dimensions, and the total score of mindfulness were significantly correlated with shame; (2) cognitive flexibility and self‐compassion could fully mediate the prediction of mindfulness on shame. The Study 2 showed that (1) mindfulness and shame were significantly negatively correlated in both phases of measurement; (2) controlling for T1 shame, T1 mindfulness was able to negatively predict T2 shame; controlling for T1 mindfulness, T1 shame was not able to predict T2 mindfulness. There is a longitudinal association between mindfulness and shame, and only mindfulness scores are predictive of the shame and not vice‐versa; both cognitive flexibility and self‐compassion can provide explanations for the prediction of shame by mindfulness. Enhancing levels of mindfulness can help alleviate individuals' shame levels.

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Study flow chart Note: FFMQ = Five facet of mindfulness questionnaire; TAI = Trait anxiety inventory; PANAS = Positive affect and negative affect scale; Ch-PQ-M = Chinese Version-Practice quality- mindfulness; SAI = State anxiety inventory; POM = Peace of mind
Results of Ch-PQM confirmatory factor analysis Tabel 1
Goodness-of-fit statistics for the modified CFA models
Test-retest reliability of Ch-PQ-M
Psychometric assessment of a Chinese version of a mindfulness practice quality measurement tool

November 2024

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44 Reads

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1 Citation

BMC Psychology

Background Mindfulness training is increasingly popular in China. The challenge of evaluating mindfulness practice objectively and accurately has attracted research attention. However, previous studies in China focused primarily on the quantity rather than the quality of mindfulness training. The Practice Quality - Mindfulness (PQ-M) can provide a solution. Consequently, the present study aimed to validate and assess the internal consistency and construct validity of the Chinese version of the Practice Quality - Mindfulness (Ch-PQ-M) in a non-clinical sample. Methods One hundred and sixty participants (female:81) were recruited to practice 20 min of mindfulness training daily for four consecutive days and to complete the Ch-PQ-M, the State Anxiety Inventory, and the Peace of Mind Scale immediately after each mindfulness practice. The Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, the Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Positive and Negative Affect Scale were administered pre- and post- 4-day treatment. Construct validity (confirmatory factor analysis), internal consistency, test–retest reliability, predictive validity and construct validity were examined. Results Ch-PQ-M demonstrated acceptable internal consistency and test–retest reliability. Confirmatory factor analysis supported the established two-factor model (perseverance and receptivity). The Ch-PQ-M attention score was significantly associated with changes of trait anxiety. It improved with short-term mindfulness practice. The perseverance score consistently correlates with scores on peace of mind, state anxiety, trait anxiety, and observe and nonreactivity. The receptivity score remains consistently correlated with the nonjudging. These findings suggest that Ch-PQ-M is a valid instrument for evaluating individual mindfulness quality for a single-session practice. Conclusions Our findings suggest that Ch-PQ-M (especially for the Ch-PQ-M perseverance score) has acceptable psychometric properties and is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing mindfulness practice quality in the Chinese cultural context.


When and how is depression associated with ostracism among college students? The mediating role of interpretation bias and the moderating role of awareness rather than acceptance

July 2024

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22 Reads

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1 Citation

Stress and Health

Depression is closely related to individual social functions. The current study aimed to examine whether depression is associated with ostracism, whether interpretation bias mediates this relationship, and whether trait mindfulness moderates direct and indirect relationships between depression and ostracism. Overall, 389 Chinese college students completed the Center for Epidemiological Survey, Depression Scale, Interpretation Bias Questionnaire, Philadelphia mindfulness scale, and perceived ostracism scale at two-time points. Latent Profile analysis and moderated mediation analysis were performed. After controlling for sex and age, depression (t1) was positively correlated to perceived ostracism, with this relationship being partially mediated by negative interpretation bias (IBN, t2). The effect of IBN on perceived ostracism was weak when awareness was high at time 2. Acceptance had a non-significant moderating role in the relationship between IBN and perceived ostracism at time 2. LPA delineated three profiles: high awareness, high acceptance, and medium mindfulness. The moderating role of the different profiles in the relationship between IBN (t2) and perceived ostracism (t2) was significant. Depressed individuals appear to experience more ostracism because of IBN. Awareness might alleviate the effect of IBN on perceived ostracism.


Results of descriptive statistics and correlation analysis for each variable
Cross-lagged model path coecients
The Effects of Mindfulness on Shame: Exploring Mediation by Cognitive Flexibility and Self-Compassion in a Chinese Adult Population

April 2024

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66 Reads

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1 Citation

Purpose: To examine the effects of mindfulness on shame and the mechanisms mediated by cognitive flexibility and self-compassion in a Chinese adult population. Methods: We conducted two studies. Study 1 was a cross-sectional study using the Five-Factor Mindfulness Questionnaire, the Cognitive Flexibility Inventory, the Self-Compassion Scale, and the Self-Conscious Affect-3, which were administered to 481 adults in Beijing and Chengdu. Study 2: An 8-month follow-up study was conducted on 128 of the adults. Results: The results of Study 1 showed that (1) the Awareness of Action, Nonjudgment dimensions, and the total score of mindfulness was significantly correlated with shame; (2) cognitive flexibility and self-compassion could fully mediate the prediction of mindfulness on shame. The Study 2 showed that (1) mindfulness and shame were significantly negatively correlated in both phases of measurement; (2) controlling for T1 shame, T1 mindfulness was able to negatively predict T2 shame; controlling for T1 mindfulness, T1 shame was not able to predict T2 mindfulness. Conclusions: (1) There is a longitudinal causal relationship between mindfulness and shame; (2) both cognitive flexibility and self-compassion can provide explanations for the prediction of shame by mindfulness. Enhancing levels of mindfulness can help alleviate individuals' shame levels.


Results of SMS-Ch confirmatory factor analysis. G, global state mindfulness; Mind, the mind dimension of state mindfulness; Body, the mind dimension of state mindfulness
State Mindfulness Scale: Psychometric Properties of the Chinese Version

June 2023

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159 Reads

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1 Citation

Mindfulness

Objectives Mindfulness training has become increasingly popular among people in China over the last few decades. However, current research on mindfulness primarily focuses on trait rather than state mindfulness, which is reflected in the measurements used. Thus, here, we validated and assessed the psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the State Mindfulness Scale (SMS) in a non-clinical sample of Chinese university students.MethodsSMS was translated into Chinese, and was back-translated. Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA) was then implemented, and its reliability and validity were examined (sample n1 = 382, sub-sample n2 = 266).ResultsThe Chinese SMS (SMS-Ch) exhibited good internal consistency and acceptable test-retest reliability. CFA provided support for the higher-order 2-factor model. The correlations between SMS and validity scales (Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, Toronto Mindfulness Scale) also provided a preliminary basis for the convergent and discriminant validity.Conclusions Our results showed that the SMS-Ch has acceptable psychometric properties and is a valid and reliable instrument for assessing state mindfulness in a Chinese cultural context.PreregistrationThis study was not pre-registered.


The Relationship between Perfectionism and Social Anxiety: A Moderated Mediation Model

October 2022

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923 Reads

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24 Citations

Social anxiety is one of the mental health problems associated with perfectionism. The present study investigated the possible mediation of perceived stress in the relationship between perfec-tionism and social anxiety, and whether this mediation depends on the level of trait mindfulness. A total of 425 college students (female: 82.9%; mean age: M = 19.90 ± 1.06 years old) completed the Multidimensional Perfectionism Scale (MPS), the Chinese Perceived Stress Scale (CPSS), the In-teraction Anxiousness Scale (IAS), and the Five-Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire (FFMQ). After controlling for age and gender, the moderated mediation analysis suggested that perfectionism significantly and positively predicted social anxiety and that perceived stress mediated the link between perfectionism and social anxiety. In addition, the indirect effect of perfectionism on social anxiety was moderated by trait mindfulness. Specifically, the indirect effect was weaker among the individuals with a high level of mindfulness compared to those with a low level of mindfulness. The findings of this study suggest that trait mindfulness significantly moderates the indirect effect of perfectionism on social anxiety via perceived stress.



The mediating effects of coping styles on the relationship between trait mindfulness and romantic relationship satisfaction

June 2022

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236 Reads

The purpose of the current study was to explore the influence of coping styles and trait mindfulness on the satisfaction of romantic relationships (RRS) among college students. Of the 305 participants, 258 (males: 115, 44.6%) had previously been in, or were presently in a romantic relationship. All participants completed the MAAS, CSQ, and questions about RRS. There was a significant meditating role of mature coping styles in the relationship between trait mindfulness and RRS (indirect effect [95% CI] = 0.021 [0.001, 0.052]). However, the mediating effect of immature coping styles was not significant (indirect effect [95% CI] = 0.038 [-0.020, 0.097]). Mature coping style plays an important mediating role in the relationship between mindfulness and relationship satisfaction.


The mediating role of emotional resilience between trait mindfulness and PTSS. Note: PTSS = post-traumatic stress symptoms; GP = generate positive emotions. RN = recover from negative emotions; ***p < 0.001
The more mindfulness practice, the more post-trauma stress symptoms? Trait mindfulness and PTSS during the COVID-19 pandemic

March 2022

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86 Reads

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1 Citation

Current Psychology

Investigating the contributing factors of post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) has always been an important topic in the field of traumatic psychology research. The current study explored the influences of pandemic/epidemic experiences, meditation experiences, and trait mindfulness on PTSS and the mediating role of emotional resilience during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 522 participants in Hubei province completed the Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire, the Adolescents’ Emotional Resilience Questionnaire, and the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5. The results showed that (1) participants who had family or friends diagnosed with COVID-19 scored higher on avoidance. (2) Participants who had family or friends had been diagnosed with SARS or H1N1 scored higher on PTSS. (3) Participants with meditation experience scored significantly higher on all dimensions of PTSS, other than avoidance. (4) The mediating role of recovering from negative emotions in the relationship between trait mindfulness and PTSS was significant (95%CI= [-0.212, -0.094]), while the generating positive emotion was not significant (95%CI= [-0.050, 0.071]). Individuals with pandemic/epidemic experience are more likely to have a high level of PTSS. Individuals who have meditation experience also express a higher level of PTSS, which may be a result of the quality of meditation. Trait mindfulness and the ability to recover from negative emotions were protective factors against PTSS.


A Bibliometric and Visualization Analysis of Mindfulness and Meditation Research from 1900 to 2021

December 2021

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376 Reads

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27 Citations

This study comprehensively summarizes research in the field of meditation, especially mindfulness meditation from 1900 to 2021, by analyzing the knowledge map through CiteSpace and VOSviewer software. Using "mindfulness *" or "meditation *" as the topic, articles included in the Science Citation Index Expanded and Social Sciences Citation Index were searched in the web of science core database, resulting in the selection of 19,752 articles. Over half a century ago, Deikman published the field's first article in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease in 1963, and publications have soared in subsequent decades. The USA is in the core position in terms of global collaboration , total publication numbers, and total citations. The Mindfulness journal ranked first for the most published articles and citations. "The benefits of being present: Mindfulness and its role in psychological well-being," written by Brown and Ryan, was the most cited article. Mindfulness, meditation, depression, intervention, stress reduction, stress, and anxiety are the top co-occurrence keywords. The timeline of cluster analysis discloses that before 2010, hypertension, cancer, mind-fulness, generalized anxiety disorder, and other topics received great attention. In the decade since 2010, scholars have shown interest in meta-analysis, attention, and self-assessment, and keen attention to mindfulness-based interventions. These findings provide an important foundation to direct future research.


Citations (14)


... Such research will highly likely strengthen the theoretical basis of the training program, while unraveling the contribution of other potential interventions, e.g., a course of mild drug therapy with and without relaxation exercises. Lastly, selfcompassion training can exert positive effects on reducing negative judgment toward self, while improving one's concentration on self strengths through cognitive reappraisal and acceptance of realities of his/her life (Chishima et al., 2018;Zhang et al., 2024). ...

Reference:

Effects of mindful self-compassion training on improving the sense of self-criticism and shame in mothers of children with autism spectrum disorder
The Effects of Mindfulness on Shame: Exploring Mediation by Cognitive Flexibility and Self‐Compassion in a Chinese Adult Population

... The FFMQ primarily measures trait mindfulness, which is generally relatively stable. Future research could make greater use of measurement tools for state mindfulness, such as the State Mindfulness Scale [29,30], or combine other assessment methods [31], to more comprehensively evaluate the impact of interventions on mindfulness levels. ...

State Mindfulness Scale: Psychometric Properties of the Chinese Version

Mindfulness

... 25 Research has indicated that perfectionists are perpetually preoccupied with gaining acknowledgment and approval, harbor a persistent dread of criticism from key individuals, and thus exhibit heightened sensitivity to interpersonal pressures. 26,27 However, although some studies have confirmed the correlation between perfectionism and interpersonal sensitivity, research samples have predominantly concentrated on adolescents 26 and other populations; no such studies have reported the degree of correlation between perfectionism and the interpersonal sensitivity of nursing students. Therefore, we sought to examine the impacts of the two distinct aspects of perfectionism, namely, adaptive perfectionism and maladaptive perfectionism, on nursing students' interpersonal sensitivity. ...

The Relationship between Perfectionism and Social Anxiety: A Moderated Mediation Model

... Therefore, mindfulness enables adolescents facing social adversity to consciously choose and recognize their thoughts, emotions, and feelings but does not generate habitual reactions, then gradually eliminating the automated evaluation process of distressed emotions (Chambers et al., 2009), thus reducing the likelihood of engaging in deviant behaviors in cyberspace. Just as the superego in psychoanalytic theory strengthens its control over the id, it avoids the implementation of socially unacceptable behaviors that result from attempts to vent negative emotions (Chen et al., 2022). ...

The role of mindfulness in alleviating ostracism

Advances in Psychological Science

... mindfulness practitioners. Although no nationwide survey has been completed to date, previous study showed that 36.6% (191 of 522) of randomly surveyed participants have meditation practice experience [6]. In 2020, the National Health Commission of the People's Republic of China recommended the use of mindfulness training in the Rehabilitation Program for Discharged Patients with COVID-19. ...

The more mindfulness practice, the more post-trauma stress symptoms? Trait mindfulness and PTSS during the COVID-19 pandemic

Current Psychology

... Meditation is an ancient practice of "paying attention in a particular way: on purpose, in the present moment, nonjudgmentally" (Kabat-Zinn et al. 1992). While people have been practicing meditation for centuries, the systematic study of its benefits and mechanisms for improving mental health has only recently begun (Rose et al. 2020;Wang et al. 2021). Meditation practice has been shown to improve emotional intelligence, mental health, and the perception of stressors in comparison to those who do not meditate (Chu 2010). ...

A Bibliometric and Visualization Analysis of Mindfulness and Meditation Research from 1900 to 2021

... The 20-item prosopagnosia index (PI-20) was a self-reporting method to screen potential patients' conditions. A Simplified Chinese Version has been published and showed good internal consistency reliability, test-retest reliability, and good validity [62]. In our study, we used our newly translated traditional Chinese Version of PI-20 from the original English Version published by Shah et al. in 2015 [54]. ...

Psychometric Properties of the Chinese version of the 20-item Prosopagnosia Index (PI20)

E3S Web of Conferences

... Additionally, the cognitive resources saved can be used to process information related to current experiences better, enhancing self-understanding and present-moment awareness [14]. Therefore, mindfulness training not only directly reduces negative emotions like anxiety [15,16], but also improves attention allocation [17,18], reducing the impact of emotions and negative thoughts on the individual's current state [19]. This enables individuals to face ongoing or impending situations with equanimity. ...

Gender differences in the benefits of meditation training on attentional blink

Current Psychology

... For example, Liu et al. (2015) demonstrated that an 8-week MT resulted in a significant improvement in inner peace. In another randomized controlled trial, the ability to allocate attention improved after an 8-week MT, which is associated with mindful nonreactivity (Wang and Xiao et al. 2021). According to Shapiro's theory, mindful reperceiving can help individuals to step back from their personal commentary on life and experiences and simply be aware of them, without becoming immersed in them. ...

Mindful non-reactivity is associated with improved accuracy in attentional blink testing: A randomized controlled trial

Current Psychology

... A Granger causality analysis revealed that activity in the STN → M1 direction increased during highconflict trials in subjects with PD [32]. Our team demonstrated that long-term L-DOPA use enhanced theta synchronization and increased information flow in the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNr) → M1 direction [33]. However, gamma-band information flow in the CBTC circuit in the dyskinetic state and the cumulative effect of chronic l-DOPA use on pathological neural network interactions remain obscure. ...

Dyskinesia is Closely Associated with Synchronization of Theta Oscillatory Activity Between the Substantia Nigra Pars Reticulata and Motor Cortex in the Off L-dopa State in Rats
  • Citing Article
  • November 2020

Neuroscience Bulletin