Social:Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills

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Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills
Medical diagnostics
Purposemeasures mindfulness

The Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills (KIMS) is a 39-item self-report measuring Mindfulness on four scales: Observing, Describing, Act With Awareness, and Accept Without Judgment. It was developed at Kentucky University by Baer, Smith, & Allen in 2004.[1][2] A short, 20-item version of it (KIMS-Short) was developed in Germany in 2011 and enables researchers to replicate the basic factor structure. However KIMS-Short shows the Observing subscale as comprising two different but strongly correlated factors depending on whether the observed stimuli are internal or external.[3] Good support has been found for the model of four correlated factors, and the scales have been found to be both highly internally consistent and sensitive to change through Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy.[4]

Relation with behavior

The four scales have been positively correlated with social activity.[5]

References

  1. Baer, R. A., Smith, G. T., & Allen, K. B. (2004). "Assessment of mindfulness by self-report: The Kentucky inventory of mindfulness skills". Assessment 11 (3): 191–206. doi:10.1177/1073191104268029. PMID 15358875. http://mindrxiv.org/cfxjz/. 
  2. Assessment of Mindfulness by Self-Report - The Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills, Sage Journals, Sept 2004
  3. Höfling, Volkmar; Ströhle, Gunnar; Michalak, Johannes; Heidenreich, Thomas (2011). "A short version of the Kentucky inventory of mindfulness skills". Journal of Clinical Psychology.
  4. Baum, Corinna; Kuyken, Willem; Bohus, Martin; Heidenreich, Thomas; Michalak, Johannes ; Steil, Regina (2009). "The Psychometric Properties of the Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills in Clinical Populations". Assessment.
  5. Mathias Dekeysera, Filip Raesa, Mia Leijssena, Sara Leysena, David Dewulf (2008). "Mindfulnessskills and interpersonal behaviour". Personality and Individual Differences.