Access High-Quality Data to Advance Your Research

Collecting data on mindfulness-based interventions requires substantial time, funding, infrastructure, and participant access. Many talented researchers have the expertise and ideas to advance the field but lack immediate access to such data.

The Mindfulness Consortium bridges that gap. We connect ambitious researchers who have methodological expertise with existing datasets contributed by investigators across the world. This way, you gain access to opportunities that would otherwise require years of recruitment, coordination, and funding to establish independently.

Datasets include trials of mindfulness-based interventions from all across the world using various psychological, neural, or other biological measures across diverse populations. This enables you to, for example:

Data access is determined by the dataset owner, and projects proceed only with mutual consent and clearly defined authorship expectations.

For early-career researchers, the Mindfulness Consortium offers the opportunity to publish papers with advanced data analyses without waiting years to build an independent dataset. For established researchers, it provides a way to expand methodological scope, initiate new collaborations, or sustain productivity between grants.

Datasets shared with The Mindfulness Consortium are searchable:

Step 1: Create your account or log in and access the database from the top-right menu. Use the search bar to enter key terms for your research question, and refine results using filters such as publication year, intervention type, sample size, and intervention duration.

 

Step 2: When you find a relevant dataset, click to view the full description, including the publication, study protocol/registration, data repository links, and any supporting documents.

 

Step 3: Click “Request this Dataset” at the bottom of the page to open the request form.

 

Step 4: Fill in the request form with information about yourself and your project. Describe your research questions, planned analyses, and timeline. The more detail you provide, the easier it is for the dataset owner to consider your request. Submitting the form is a request to connect with the dataset owner; it does not automatically grant access to the data.

 

Step 5: Submit your request. Mindfulness Consortium staff will review it for clarity and forward it to the dataset owner. You can track all your requests under “My Requests” in the Members section.

 

Step 6: The dataset owner will then be in contact directly to discuss the project and collaboration terms.

To make the process even easier, download our Step-by-Step Membership Guide which includes an offline version of the form and walks you through each stage in detail:

What's Next?

Successful collaboration depends on transparency and clear communication. Before beginning a project, we strongly recommend discussing:

Seamless and efficient research partnerships begin with clear contribution agreements. We recommend aligning authorship with APA Ethics Code Standard 8.12 (Publication Credit) and using the Contributor Role Taxonomy (CRediT) to define roles transparently and strategically.

Robust data stewardship strengthens both scientific integrity and long-term impact. APA’s data sharing guidance provides a framework for secure, transparent, and reproducible research practices.

Pre-specifying analytic strategies enhances rigor and credibility. We encourage teams to document analysis plans and follow APA’s Transparency and Openness Promotion (TOP) Guidelines to support cumulative science.

High-impact projects require coordinated execution. Establishing shared timelines, manuscript plans, and communication norms early ensures efficient progress and sustained collaboration. The APA’s Monitor on Psychology article on cooperation and communication provides practical guidance for structuring effective research partnerships.

All collaborative projects must meet applicable ethical and institutional standards. APA Ethics Code Standard 8.14 (Sharing Research Data for Verification) outlines responsible practices that protect participants while advancing scientific discovery.