RT Journal Article T1 Short mindfulness meditation training: does it really reduce perceived stress? A1 Horrillo Álvarez, Barbara A1 Marín Martín, Carolina A1 Rodríguez Abuín, Manuel A1 Orio Ortiz, Laura AB To study whether an 8-week mindfulness meditation training program truly reduces perceived stress without designing a stress reduction program. An experimental study was performed in which we studied the efects of 8 weeks of MM training on attention and awareness, as measured by the MAAS (mindfulness attention awareness scale) and perceived stress, as measured by the PSQ (perceived stress questionnaire), in 80 volunteers from the general public recruited by email from university centers. An increase in the individual’s dispositional capacity to be attentive and aware of the experience of the present moment in everyday life was observed in the experimental group versus the control group; F (2, 156)=14.30, p=.000, η2 partial=.155. Perceived stress showed no signifcant diferences between groups in: social acceptance; F (2, 156)=2.30, p=.103, overload; F (2, 156)=2.32, p=.101, irritability, tension and fatigue; F (2, 156)=2.27, p=.106, energy and joy; F (2, 156)=2.79, p=.065. MM practice for 8 weeks of training increases the individual’s dispositional capacity to be attentive and aware of the experience of the present moment in everyday life but may not reduce perceived stress. PB Springer Nature SN 1612-4782 YR 2022 FD 2022-09-21 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/72051 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/72051 LA eng NO CRUE-CSIC (Acuerdos Transformativos 2022) DS Docta Complutense RD 21 abr 2025