Litcius/Paper detail

Understanding the First Person Experience of Walking Mindfulness Meditation Facilitated by EEG Modulated Interactive Soundscape

Karen Anne Cochrane, Lian Loke, Matthew Leete, Andrew Campbell, Naseem Ahmadpour

202158 citationsDOI

Abstract

Walking meditation is a form of mindfulness training, where the act of walking provides a rhythmic meter for attentional focus. Whilst digital technologies to support sitting meditation and walking practices exist, less explored is the first person in-the-moment experience of technology-mediated walking meditation. We present a study of group walking meditation, with and without an interactive rhythmic soundscape modulated by one practitioner’s brainwave data. Six workshops were conducted with novice and advanced practitioners, involving a guided walking meditation with body scan, writing and drawing exercises and a group interview. The analysis yielded themes of shifting state, attention, self-regulation strategy, and immersion and reflection, and insights into how practitioners use sound to synchronize both walking and breathing. We contribute a method for eliciting, and a novel description of, the first person experience of walking meditation, as resources for the design of interactive technologies to support mindfulness practices of walking meditation.

Topics & Concepts

SoundscapeMeditationMindfulnessElectroencephalographyComputer sciencePsychologyCognitive psychologyHuman–computer interactionPsychotherapistAcousticsSound (geography)HistoryNeuroscienceArchaeologyPhysicsSleep and Wakefulness ResearchMindfulness and Compassion InterventionsSleep and related disorders