Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) C. Bohmer , D. Stevens-Watkins , A. Sanchez , K.M. Tyler , Natalie J. Malone , Chesmore S. Montique , Jardin Dogan , Jennifer Stuck , Carolyn Meiller , Queen-Ayanna Sullivan , Rena M. G. Curvey , C. Hargons , Paul Hallwood
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Western Graduate School of Psychology, University of Kentucky
ANO 2020
TIPO Book
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 154CBA33549165DFB0E4A27506AAFF88

Resumo

Twenty-six Black collegians were exposed to a vicarious racial harassment stimulus (VRHS) then randomized into a Black Lives Matter Meditation for Healing Racial Trauma condition or a silence control condition. Heart rate (HR) was recorded throughout the experiment. Semi-structured interviews were then conducted to elicit participants' appraisal of the VRHS and meditation. Using a Qual:Quan mixed methods experimental design, this pilot study qualitatively categorized how participants (1) described their reactions to the VRHS and (2) appraised the meditation. Participants described three types of race-based stress reactions and reported mostly positive appraisal of the meditation, although some indicated that it would not be a preferred coping strategy. To triangulate the quantitative findings, we found a significant increase in HR during VRHS. The meditation group displayed statistically significant reductions in HR from stimulus to the end of meditation; however, there were no statistically significant differences between the control and meditation groups. Results have implications for understanding and facilitating race-based stress recovery.

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