Hypnosis: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|State of increased suggestibility}} |
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[[Image:Hypnotisk seans av Richard Bergh 1887.jpg|thumb|right|Hypnotic Seance, by [[Richard Bergh]]]] |
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{{Redirect-several|dab=off|Hypnotized (disambiguation)|Hypnotize (disambiguation)|Hypnotist (disambiguation)}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}} |
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{{Infobox medical intervention |name=Hypnosis|image=File:Une leçon clinique à la Salpêtrière.jpg|caption= [[Jean-Martin Charcot]] demonstrating hypnosis on a "[[Hysteria|hysterical]]" ''[[Salpêtrière]]'' patient, "Blanche" ([[Marie Wittman]]), who is supported by [[Joseph Babiński]]<ref>See: [[A Clinical Lesson at the Salpêtrière]].</ref>|ICD10=|ICD9=|MeshID=D006990|OPS301=|other_codes=|HCPCSlevel2=}} |
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'''Hypnosis''' is a [[Psychology|psychological]] condition in which some people may be induced to show various differences in behaviour and thinking. Although some individuals experience an increase in suggestibility and subjective feelings of an '[[altered state of consciousness]]', this is not true for everyone. In fact, some supposed hypnotic indicators and subjective changes can be achieved without relaxation or a lengthy induction, a fact that increases the controversy around hypnosis. |
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[[File:Hypnotic Séance (Richard Bergh) - Nationalmuseum - 18855.tif|thumb|right|''Hypnotic Séance'' (1887) by [[Richard Bergh]]]] |
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[[File:Photographic Studies in Hypnosis, Abnormal Psychology (1938).ogv|thumb|thumbtime=7|''Photographic Studies in Hypnosis, Abnormal Psychology'' (1938)]] |
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{{Hypnosis}} |
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'''Hypnosis''' is a human condition involving focused [[attention]] (the selective attention/selective inattention hypothesis, SASI),<ref name="SI Hall">{{cite journal |last1=Hall |first1=Harriet |authorlink= Harriet Hall|title=Hypnosis revisited |journal=Skeptical Inquirer |date=2021 |volume=45 |issue=2 |pages=17–19}}</ref> reduced peripheral awareness, and an enhanced capacity to respond to [[suggestion]].<ref name="Lynn SJ 2015">In 2015, the [[American Psychological Association]] Division 30 defined hypnosis as a "state of consciousness involving focused attention and reduced peripheral awareness characterized by an enhanced capacity for response to suggestion". For critical commentary on this definition, see: {{cite journal | vauthors = Lynn SJ, Green JP, Kirsch I, Capafons A, Lilienfeld SO, Laurence JR, Montgomery GH | title = Grounding Hypnosis in Science: The "New" APA Division 30 Definition of Hypnosis as a Step Backward | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 57 | issue = 4 | pages = 390–401 | date = April 2015 | pmid = 25928778 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.2015.1011472 | s2cid = 10797114}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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''See :[[History of hypnosis]]'' |
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There are competing theories explaining hypnosis and related phenomena. ''Altered state'' theories see hypnosis as an [[altered state of mind]] or [[trance]], marked by a level of awareness different from the ordinary [[Consciousness|state of consciousness]].<ref>''Encyclopædia Britannica'', 2004: "a special psychological state with certain physiological attributes, resembling sleep only superficially and marked by a functioning of the individual at a level of awareness other than the ordinary conscious state".</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Erika Fromm|author2=Ronald E. Shor|title=Hypnosis: Developments in Research and New Perspectives|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=fgBrdEoTu3AC&q=hypnosis|access-date=27 September 2014|date=2009|publisher=Rutgers|isbn=978-0-202-36262-5|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702162804/https://books.google.com/books?id=fgBrdEoTu3AC&q=hypnosis|url-status=live}}</ref> In contrast, ''non-state'' theories see hypnosis as, variously, a type of placebo effect,<ref name=":0">{{cite journal | vauthors = Kirsch I | title = Clinical hypnosis as a nondeceptive placebo: empirically derived techniques | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 37 | issue = 2 | pages = 95–106 | date = October 1994 | pmid = 7992808 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.1994.10403122}}</ref><ref name=":1">Kirsch, I., "Clinical Hypnosis as a Nondeceptive Placebo", pp. 211–25 in Kirsch, I., Capafons, A., Cardeña-Buelna, E., Amigó, S. (eds.), ''Clinical Hypnosis and Self-Regulation: Cognitive-Behavioral Perspectives'', American Psychological Association, (Washington), 1999 {{ISBN|1-55798-535-9}}</ref> a redefinition of an interaction with a therapist<ref>{{cite book|title=Hypnosis: A Scientific Approach|author=Theodore X. Barber|publisher=J. Aronson, 1995|year=1969|isbn=978-1-56821-740-6|author-link=Theodore X. Barber}}</ref> or a form of imaginative [[Role theory|role enactment]].<ref>{{cite journal|vauthors=Lynn S, Fassler O, Knox J|title=Hypnosis and the altered state debate: something more or nothing more?|doi=10.1002/ch.21|year=2005|journal=Contemporary Hypnosis|volume=22|pages=39–45}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Coe WC, Buckner LG, Howard ML, Kobayashi K | title = Hypnosis as role enactment: focus on a role specific skill | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 15 | issue = 1 | pages = 41–45 | date = July 1972 | pmid = 4679790 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.1972.10402209}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author1=Steven J. Lynn|author2=Judith W. Rhue|title=Theories of hypnosis: current models and perspectives|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ez7Nq80QMtoC|access-date=30 October 2011|year=1991|publisher=Guilford Press|isbn=978-0-89862-343-7|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702162816/https://books.google.com/books?id=Ez7Nq80QMtoC|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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During hypnosis, a person is said to have heightened focus and [[Attentional control|concentration]]<ref>Orne, M. T. (1962). On the social psychology of the psychological experiment: With particular reference to demand characteristics and their implications. American |
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Psychologist, 17, 776-783</ref><ref name="Segi">{{cite journal | last= Segi |first= Sherril |year=2012 |title=Hypnosis for pain management, anxiety and behavioral disorders |journal=The Clinical Advisor: For Nurse Practitioners|issn=1524-7317|volume=15|issue=3|page=80}}</ref> and an increased response to suggestions.<ref>[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/05/07/neural_pathways.html Lyda, Alex. "Hypnosis Gaining Ground in Medicine." Columbia News] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081007194608/http://www.columbia.edu/cu/news/05/07/neural_pathways.html |date=7 October 2008 }}. Columbia.edu. Retrieved on 1 October 2011.</ref> |
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Hypnosis usually begins with a [[hypnotic induction]] involving a series of preliminary instructions and suggestions. The use of hypnosis for therapeutic purposes is referred to as "[[hypnotherapy]]",<ref>Spanos, N. P., Spillane, J., & McPeake, J. D. (1976). Cognitive strategies and response to suggestion in hypnotic |
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and task-motivated subjects. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 18, 252-262.</ref> while its use as a form of entertainment for an audience is known as "[[stage hypnosis]]", a form of [[mentalism]]. |
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Hypnosis-based therapies for the management of [[irritable bowel syndrome]] and [[menopause]] are supported by evidence.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Lacy|first1=Brian E.|last2=Pimentel|first2=Mark|last3=Brenner|first3=Darren M.|last4=Chey|first4=William D.|last5=Keefer|first5=Laurie A.|last6=Long|first6=Millie D.|last7=Moshiree|first7=Baha|date=January 2021|title=ACG Clinical Guideline: Management of Irritable Bowel Syndrome|journal= American Journal of Gastroenterology|language=en-US|volume=116|issue=1|pages=17–44|doi=10.14309/ajg.0000000000001036|pmid=33315591|issn=0002-9270|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name="auto">{{Cite journal|date=November 2015|title=Nonhormonal management of menopause-associated vasomotor symptoms: 2015 position statement of The North American Menopause Society|url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26382310/|journal=Menopause|volume=22|issue=11|pages=1155–1172; quiz 1173–1174|doi=10.1097/GME.0000000000000546|issn=1530-0374|pmid=26382310|s2cid=14841660|access-date=7 September 2021|archive-date=22 March 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210322145613/https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26382310/|url-status=live}}</ref> The use of hypnosis as a form of therapy to retrieve and integrate early trauma is controversial within the scientific mainstream. Research indicates that hypnotising an individual may aid the formation of false memories,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lynn |first1=Steven Jay |last2=Krackow |first2=Elisa |last3=Loftus |first3=Elizabeth F. |author-link3=Elizabeth Loftus |last4=Locke |first4=Timothy G. |last5=Lilienfeld |first5=Scott O. |author-link5=Scott Lilienfeld |date=2014 |chapter=Constructing the past: problematic memory recovery techniques in psychotherapy |editor1-last=Lilienfeld |editor1-first=Scott O. |editor2-last=Lynn |editor2-first=Steven Jay |editor3-last=Lohr |editor3-first=Jeffrey M. |title=Science and pseudoscience in clinical psychology |edition=2nd |location=New York |publisher=[[Guilford Press]] |pages=245–275 |isbn=9781462517510 |oclc=890851087}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=French |first=Christopher C. |url=https://www.academia.edu/101922617 |title=The Reliability of UFO Witness Testimony |publisher=UPIAR |year=2023 |isbn=9791281441002 |editor-last=Ballester-Olmos |editor-first=V.J. |location=Turin, Italy |pages=283–294 |chapter=Hypnotic Regression and False Memories |editor-last2=Heiden |editor-first2=Richard W.}}</ref> and that hypnosis "does not help people recall events more accurately".<ref>{{cite news |last1=Hall |first1=Celia |title=Hypnosis does not help accurate memory recall, says study |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1338671/Hypnosis-does-not-help-accurate-memory-recall-says-study.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1338671/Hypnosis-does-not-help-accurate-memory-recall-says-study.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live |website=Telegraph |access-date=11 March 2019|date=26 August 2001}}{{cbignore}}</ref> Medical hypnosis is often considered [[pseudoscience]] or [[quackery]].<ref name="naud">{{cite journal |last1=Naudet |first1=Florian |last2=Falissard |first2=Bruno |author2-link=Bruno Falissard |last3=Boussageon |first3=Rémy |last4=Healy |first4=David |date=2015 |title=Has evidence-based medicine left quackery behind? |url=https://hal-univ-rennes1.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01138648/file/Has%20evidence-based%20medicine%20left%20quackery%20behind_accepted.pdf |journal=Internal and Emergency Medicine |volume=10 |issue=5 |pages=631–634 |doi=10.1007/s11739-015-1227-3 |issn=1970-9366 |pmid=25828467 |s2cid=20697592 |quote=Treatments such as relaxation techniques, chiropractic, therapeutic massage, special diets, megavitamins, acupuncture, naturopathy, homeopathy, hypnosis and psychoanalysis are often considered as ‘‘pseudoscience’’ or ‘‘quackery’’ with no credible or respectable place in medicine, because in evaluation they have not been shown to ‘‘work’’}}</ref> |
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==Definitions== |
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{{TOC limit|3}} |
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== Etymology == |
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It is often said that there are as many definitions of hypnosis as there are hypnotists. Researchers and clinicians have different requirements for explanations of hypnosis, so that the focus of theories from these respective fields can vary greatly. |
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The words ''hypnosis'' and ''hypnotism'' both derive from the term ''neuro-hypnotism'' (nervous sleep), all of which were coined by [[Étienne Félix d'Henin de Cuvillers]] in the 1820s. The term ''hypnosis'' is derived from the [[ancient Greek]] ὑπνος ''hypnos'', "sleep", and the [[suffix]] -ωσις -''osis'', or from ὑπνόω ''hypnoō'', "put to sleep" ([[Word stem|stem]] of [[aorist]] ''hypnōs''-) and the suffix -''is''.<ref>''{{LSJ|u(/pnos|hypnos}}'', ''{{LSJ|u(pno/w|hypnoō|ref}}''.</ref><ref>{{OEtymD|hypnosis}}</ref> These words were popularised in [[English language|English]] by the [[Scotland|Scottish]] surgeon [[James Braid (surgeon)|James Braid]] (to whom they are sometimes wrongly attributed) around 1841.{{Citation needed|date=August 2024}} Braid based his practice on that developed by [[Franz Mesmer]] and his followers (which was called "Mesmerism" or "[[animal magnetism]]"), but differed in his theory as to how the procedure worked. |
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== Definition and classification == |
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Some [[scientist]]s have disputed its very existence, while others insist upon both its reality and value. One fundamental distinction in hypnosis theory is between 'state' and 'non-state' approaches to hypnosis. State theorists believe that hypnosis is an [[altered state of consciousness]], whereas non-state theorists believe that hypnotic effects are the product of more-mundane psychological processes such as absorption and expectancy. The APA definition (below), essentially a consensus statement from a broad range of researchers and clinicians, remains neutral in this argument. This controversy may be decreasing as [[Functional magnetic resonance imaging|modern brain-imaging techniques]] offer hope for an increased understanding of the nature of hypnosis and the value of both perspectives is increasingly recognized. |
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A person in a state of hypnosis has focused attention, deeply relaxed physical and mental state and has increased [[suggestibility]].<ref>T.L. Brink. (2008) Psychology: A Student Friendly Approach. "Unit 5: Perception." p. 88 [http://www.saylor.org/site/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/TLBrink_PSYCH05.pdf] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120416002209/http://www.saylor.org/site/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/TLBrink_PSYCH05.pdf|date=16 April 2012}}</ref> |
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The following definitions have been divided into (arguably) well-known definitions from highly regarded individuals/groups and lesser-known definitions. |
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{{blockquote|text=The hypnotized individual appears to heed only the communications of the hypnotist and typically responds in an uncritical, automatic fashion while ignoring all aspects of the environment other than those pointed out by the hypnotist. In a hypnotic state an individual tends to see, feel, smell, and otherwise perceive in accordance with the hypnotist's suggestions, even though these suggestions may be in apparent contradiction to the actual stimuli present in the environment. The effects of hypnosis are not limited to sensory change; even the subject's memory and awareness of self may be altered by suggestion, and the effects of the suggestions may be extended (post-hypnotically) into the subject's subsequent waking activity.<ref>"hypnosis." ''Encyclopædia Britannica'' web edition. Retrieved: 20 March 2016.</ref>}} |
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It could be said that hypnotic suggestion is explicitly intended to make use of the [[placebo]] effect. For example, in 1994, [[Irving Kirsch]] characterized hypnosis as a "non-deceptive placebo", i.e., a method that openly makes use of suggestion and employs methods to amplify its effects.<ref name=":0"/><ref name=":1"/> |
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A definition of hypnosis, derived from academic [[psychology]], was provided in 2005, when the Society for Psychological Hypnosis, Division 30 of the [[American Psychological Association]] (APA), published the following formal definition: |
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===More Popular Definitions=== |
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{{blockquote|Hypnosis typically involves an introduction to the procedure during which the subject is told that suggestions for imaginative experiences will be presented. The hypnotic induction is an extended initial suggestion for using one's imagination, and may contain further elaborations of the introduction. A hypnotic procedure is used to encourage and evaluate responses to suggestions. When using hypnosis, one person (the subject) is guided by another (the hypnotist) to respond to suggestions for changes in subjective experience, alterations in perception,<ref name="Leslie">{{citation |url=http://news.stanford.edu/news/2000/september6/hypnosis-96.html |title=Research supports the notion that hypnosis can transform perception |work=Stanford Report |last=Leslie |first=Mitch |name-list-style=vanc |date=6 September 2000 |publisher=Stanford University |access-date=16 June 2013 |archive-date=2 August 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130802154015/http://news.stanford.edu/news/2000/september6/hypnosis-96.html |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Mauera">{{cite journal | vauthors = Mauer MH, Burnett KF, Ouellette EA, Ironson GH, Dandes HM | title = Medical hypnosis and orthopedic hand surgery: pain perception, postoperative recovery, and therapeutic comfort | journal = The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | volume = 47 | issue = 2 | pages = 144–61 | date = April 1999 | pmid = 10208075 | doi = 10.1080/00207149908410027}}</ref> sensation,<ref name="De Pascalis">{{cite journal | vauthors = De Pascalis V, Magurano MR, Bellusci A | title = Pain perception, somatosensory event-related potentials and skin conductance responses to painful stimuli in high, mid, and low hypnotizable subjects: effects of differential pain reduction strategies | journal = Pain | volume = 83 | issue = 3 | pages = 499–508 | date = December 1999 | pmid = 10568858 | doi = 10.1016/S0304-3959(99)00157-8 | s2cid = 3158482 | id = {{INIST|1291393}}}}</ref> emotion, thought or behavior. Persons can also learn self-hypnosis, which is the act of administering hypnotic procedures on one's own. If the subject responds to hypnotic suggestions, it is generally inferred that hypnosis has been induced. Many believe that hypnotic responses and experiences are characteristic of a hypnotic state. While some think that it is not necessary to use the word "hypnosis" as part of the hypnotic induction, others view it as essential.<ref>[http://www.apa.org/divisions/div30/define_hypnosis.html "New Definition: Hypnosis"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080910220114/http://www.apa.org/divisions/div30/define_hypnosis.html |date=10 September 2008 }}. Society of Psychological Hypnosis Division 30 – American Psychological Association.</ref>}} |
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====[[American Psychological Association]]==== |
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Hypnosis typically involves an introduction to the procedure during which the subject is told that suggestions for imaginative experiences will be presented. The hypnotic induction is an extended initial suggestion for using one's imagination, and may contain further elaborations of the introduction. A hypnotic procedure is used to encourage and evaluate responses to suggestions. When using hypnosis, one person (the subject) is guided by another (the hypnotist) to respond to suggestions for changes in subjective experience, alterations in perception, sensation, emotion, thought or behavior. Persons can also learn self-hypnosis, which is the act of administering hypnotic procedures on one's own. If the subject responds to hypnotic suggestions, it is generally inferred that hypnosis has been induced. Many believe that hypnotic responses and experiences are characteristic of a hypnotic state. While some think that it is not necessary to use the word "hypnosis" as part of the hypnotic induction, others view it as essential. |
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Michael Nash provides a list of eight definitions of hypnosis by different authors, in addition to his own view that hypnosis is "a special case of psychological [[Regression (psychology)|regression]]": |
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Details of hypnotic procedures and suggestions will differ depending on the goals of the practitioner and the purposes of the clinical or research endeavor. Procedures traditionally involve suggestions to relax, though relaxation is not necessary for hypnosis and a wide variety of suggestions can be used including those to become more alert. Suggestions that permit the extent of hypnosis to be assessed by comparing responses to standardized scales can be used in both clinical and research settings. While the majority of individuals are responsive to at least some suggestions, scores on standardized scales range from high to negligible. Traditionally, scores are grouped into low, medium, and high categories. As is the case with other positively scaled measures of psychological constructs such as attention and awareness, the salience of evidence for having achieved hypnosis increases with the individual's score. |
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# [[Pierre Janet|Janet]], near the turn of the century, and more recently [[Ernest Hilgard]] ..., have defined hypnosis in terms of [[Dissociation (psychology)|dissociation]]. |
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# [[Social psychologist]]s Sarbin and Coe ... have described hypnosis in terms of [[role theory]]. Hypnosis is a role that people play; they act "as if" they were hypnotised. |
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# [[T. X. Barber]] ... defined hypnosis in terms of nonhypnotic behavioural parameters, such as task motivation and the act of labeling the situation as hypnosis. |
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# In his early writings, [[André Muller Weitzenhoffer|Weitzenhoffer]] ... conceptualised hypnosis as a state of enhanced suggestibility. Most recently ... he has defined hypnotism as "a form of influence by one person exerted on another through the medium or agency of suggestion." |
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# [[Psychoanalyst]]s Gill and Brenman ... described hypnosis by using the psychoanalytic concept of "regression in the service of the ego". |
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# Edmonston ... has assessed hypnosis as being merely a state of relaxation. |
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# Spiegel and Spiegel... have implied that hypnosis is a biological capacity.<ref name="books.google.com">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ez7Nq80QMtoC|title=Theories of Hypnosis: Current Models and Perspectives|first1=Steven J.|last1=Lynn|first2=Judith W.|last2=Rhue|date=4 October 1991|publisher=Guilford Press|isbn=9780898623437|via=Google Books|access-date=7 November 2015|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702162816/https://books.google.com/books?id=Ez7Nq80QMtoC|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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# [[Milton H. Erickson|Erickson]] ... is considered the leading exponent of the position that hypnosis is a special, inner-directed, altered state of functioning.<ref name="books.google.com"/> |
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Joe Griffin and [[Ivan Tyrrell]] (the originators of the [[Human givens|human givens approach]]) define hypnosis as "any artificial way of accessing the [[Rapid eye movement sleep|REM]] state, the same brain state in which dreaming occurs" and suggest that this definition, when properly understood, resolves "many of the mysteries and controversies surrounding hypnosis".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Griffin |first1=Joe |last2=Tyrrell |first2=Ivan |name-list-style=vanc |title=Human Givens: The new approach to emotional health and clear thinking |date=2013 |publisher=HG Publishing |isbn=978-1-899398-31-7 |page=67 |url=http://www.humangivens.com/publications/human-givens-book.html |access-date=24 February 2015 |archive-date=8 October 2014 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141008073609/http://www.humangivens.com/publications/human-givens-book.html |url-status=live }}</ref> They see the REM state as being vitally important for life itself, for programming in our instinctive knowledge initially (after Dement<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Roffwarg HP, Muzio JN, Dement WC | title = Ontogenetic development of the human sleep-dream cycle | journal = Science | volume = 152 | issue = 3722 | pages = 604–19 | date = April 1966 | pmid = 17779492 | doi = 10.1126/science.152.3722.604 | bibcode = 1966Sci...152..604R}}</ref> and Jouvet<ref>{{cite book |chapter=Does a genetic programming of the brain occur during paradoxical sleep |year=1978 |first=M |last=Jouvet |editor-last1=Buser|editor-first1=Pierre A.|editor-last2=Rougeul-Buser|editor-first2=Arlette| name-list-style = vanc |title=Cerebral correlates of conscious experience: proceedings of an international symposium on cerebral correlates of conscious experience, held in Senanque Abbey, France, on 2–8 August 1977|publisher=North-Holland|location=New York|isbn=978-0-7204-0659-7}}</ref>) and then for adding to this throughout life. They attempt to explain this by asserting that, in a sense, all learning is post-hypnotic, which they say explains why the number of ways people can be put into a hypnotic state are so varied: according to them, anything that focuses a person's attention, inward or outward, puts them into a trance.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Griffin|first1=Joe|last2=Tyrrell|first2=Ivan|name-list-style=vanc|title=Godhead: the brain's big bang: the strange origin of creativity, mysticism and mental illness|date=2011|publisher=Human Givens|location=Chalvington|isbn=978-1-899398-27-0|pages=106–22|url=http://www.griffintyrrell.co.uk/creativity-mysticism-and-mental-illness.php|access-date=24 February 2015|archive-date=25 March 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150325000932/http://www.griffintyrrell.co.uk/creativity-mysticism-and-mental-illness.php|url-status=live}}</ref><!-- fails verification: <ref name="Bewley Ross Braillon Ernst 2011 p. d5960">{{cite journal | last1=Bewley | first1=Susan | last2=Ross | first2=Nick | last3=Braillon | first3=Alain | last4=Ernst | first4=Edzard | last5=Garrow | first5=John | last6=Rose | first6=Les | last7=Brahams | first7=Diana | last8=Baum | first8=Michael | last9=Marks | first9=Vincent | last10=Isaacs | first10=Keith | last11=May | first11=James | title=Clothing naked quackery and legitimising pseudoscience | journal=BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.) | volume=343 | date=2011-09-20 | issn=1756-1833 | pmid=21937550 | doi=10.1136/bmj.d5960 | page=d5960| s2cid=19450377 }}</ref><ref name="Ernst 2011 p. d4370">{{cite journal | last=Ernst | first=Edzard | title=College of medicine or college of quackery? | journal=BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.) | volume=343 | date=2011-07-12 | issn=1756-1833 | pmid=21750062 | doi=10.1136/bmj.d4370 | page=d4370| s2cid=8061172 }}</ref>--> |
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(see [http://www.apa.org/divisions/div30/define_hypnosis.html Complete definition and description].) |
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== |
== Induction == |
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{{Main|Hypnotic induction}} |
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[[Michael Yapko]] defines hypnosis: "...hypnosis is a process of influential communication in which the clinician elicits and guides the inner associations of the client in order to establish or strengthen therapeutic associations in the context of a collaborative and mutually responsive goal-oriented relationship. (Yapko, M.. Hypnosis and the Treatment of Depressions. Brunner/Mazel Inc., New York, New York, ISBN 0-87630-682-2, p. 37) |
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Hypnosis is normally preceded by a "hypnotic induction" technique. Traditionally, this was interpreted as a method of putting the subject into a "hypnotic trance"; however, subsequent "nonstate" theorists have viewed it differently, seeing it as a means of heightening client expectation, defining their role, focusing attention, etc. The induction techniques and methods are dependent on the depth of hypnotic trance level and for each stage of trance, the number of which in some sources ranges from 30 stages to 50 stages, there are different types of inductions.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Irawan |first1=Chandra |title=COMBINATION OF HYPNOSIS THERAPY AND RANGE OF MOTION EXERCISE ON UPPER-EXTREMITY MUSCLE STRENGTH IN PATIENTS WITH NON-HEMORRAGHIC STROKE |url=https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-depth-of-hypnosis-influence-with-scores-and-objective-symptoms-based-on-The-Davis_tbl1_331217313 |website=researchgate.net |access-date=4 May 2022 |archive-date=4 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220504091654/https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-depth-of-hypnosis-influence-with-scores-and-objective-symptoms-based-on-The-Davis_tbl1_331217313 |url-status=live }}</ref> There are several different induction techniques. One of the most influential methods was Braid's "eye-fixation" technique, also known as "Braidism". Many variations of the eye-fixation approach exist, including the induction used in the [[Hypnotic susceptibility|Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale]] (SHSS), the most widely used research tool in the field of hypnotism.<ref name="Weitzenhoffer">{{cite book |last= Weitzenhoffer & Hilgard |title= Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scales, Forms A & B. |year= 1959 |publisher= Consulting Psychologists Press |location= Palo Alto, CA}}</ref> Braid's original description of his induction is as follows:{{blockquote|Take any bright object (e.g. a lancet case) between the thumb and fore and middle fingers of the left hand; hold it from about eight to fifteen inches from the eyes, at such position above the forehead as may be necessary to produce the greatest possible strain upon the eyes and eyelids, and enable the patient to maintain a steady fixed stare at the object.<br /><br />The patient must be made to understand that he is to keep the eyes steadily fixed on the object, and the mind riveted on the idea of that one object. It will be observed, that owing to the consensual adjustment of the eyes, the pupils will be at first contracted: They will shortly begin to dilate, and, after they have done so to a considerable extent, and have assumed a wavy motion, if the fore and middle fingers of the right hand, extended and a little separated, are carried from the object toward the eyes, most probably the eyelids will close involuntarily, with a vibratory motion. If this is not the case, or the patient allows the eyeballs to move, desire him to begin anew, giving him to understand that he is to allow the eyelids to close when the fingers are again carried towards the eyes, but that the eyeballs must be kept fixed, in the same position, and the mind riveted to the one idea of the object held above the eyes. In general, it will be found, that the eyelids close with a vibratory motion, or become spasmodically closed.<ref>Braid (1843), p. 27.</ref>}} |
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Braid later acknowledged that the hypnotic induction technique was not necessary in every case, and subsequent researchers have generally found that on average it contributes less than previously expected to the effect of hypnotic suggestions.<ref name="Barber, Spanos 1974">[https://books.google.com/books?id=fCRsAAAAMAAJ Barber, TX, Spanos, NP. & Chaves, JF., ''Hypnosis, imagination, and human potentialities''. Pergamon Press, 1974.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163311/https://books.google.com/books?id=fCRsAAAAMAAJ |date=2 July 2023 }} {{ISBN|0-08-017931-2}}.</ref> Variations and alternatives to the original hypnotic induction techniques were subsequently developed. However, this method is still considered authoritative.{{Citation needed|date=July 2016}} In 1941, Robert White wrote: "It can be safely stated that nine out of ten hypnotic techniques call for reclining posture, muscular relaxation, and optical fixation followed by eye closure."<ref>{{cite journal|year=1941|title=A preface to the theory of hypnotism|journal=Journal of Abnormal & Social Psychology|volume=36|issue=4|pages=477–505 (498)|doi=10.1037/h0053844|author=White, Robert W.}}</ref> |
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== |
== Suggestion == |
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{{Main|Suggestion}} |
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[[Dave Elman]] defines hypnosis as "a state of mind in which the critical faculty of the human mind is bypassed, and selective thinking established." The critical faculty of your mind is that part which passes judgment. It distinguishes between concepts of hot and cold, sweet and sour, large and small, dark and light. If we can bypass this critical faculty in such a way that you no longer distinguish between hot and cold, sweet and sour, we can substitute selective thinking for conventional judgment making. <ref>— Dave Elman, ''Hypnotherapy'', Westwood Publishing Company, 1984 ISBN 0-930298-04-7 (page 26).</ref> |
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When [[James Braid (surgeon)|James Braid]] first described hypnotism, he did not use the term "suggestion" but referred instead to the act of focusing the conscious mind of the subject upon a single dominant idea. Braid's main therapeutic strategy involved stimulating or reducing physiological functioning in different regions of the body. In his later works, however, Braid placed increasing emphasis upon the use of a variety of different verbal and non-verbal forms of suggestion, including the use of "waking suggestion" and self-hypnosis. Subsequently, [[Hippolyte Bernheim]] shifted the emphasis from the physical state of hypnosis on to the psychological process of verbal suggestion: |
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{{blockquote|text= |
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====Richard Bandler==== |
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I define hypnotism as the induction of a peculiar psychical [i.e., mental] condition which increases the susceptibility to suggestion. Often, it is true, the [hypnotic] sleep that may be induced facilitates suggestion, but it is not the necessary preliminary. It is suggestion that rules hypnotism.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RVtNAQAAIAAJ|title=Hypnosis & Suggestion in Psychotherapy: A Treatise on the Nature and Uses of Hypnotism. Tr. from the 2d Rev. Ed|first=Hippolyte|last=Bernheim|date=11 July 1964|publisher=University Books|via=Google Books|access-date=11 October 2019|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163308/https://books.google.com/books?id=RVtNAQAAIAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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Richard Bandler, the co-founder of [[Neuro-linguistic programming|Neuro-Linguistic-Programming]], is most famed for his work at removing [[phobia]]s within two minutes and the handshake interrupt - a trance induction which uses the subconscious process of a handshake to induce a deep trance. He claims to have never found a single person to be unhypnotisable. |
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}} |
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Bernheim's conception of the primacy of verbal suggestion in hypnotism dominated the subject throughout the 20th century, leading some authorities to declare him the father of modern hypnotism.<ref name="Weitzenhoffer, 2000"/> |
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===Lesser-Known Definitions=== |
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Contemporary hypnotism uses a variety of suggestion forms including direct verbal suggestions, "indirect" verbal suggestions such as requests or insinuations, metaphors and other rhetorical figures of speech, and non-verbal suggestion in the form of mental imagery, voice tonality, and physical manipulation. A distinction is commonly made between suggestions delivered "permissively" and those delivered in a more "authoritarian" manner. Harvard hypnotherapist [[Deirdre Barrett]] writes that most modern research suggestions are designed to bring about immediate responses, whereas hypnotherapeutic suggestions are usually post-hypnotic ones that are intended to trigger responses affecting behaviour for periods ranging from days to a lifetime in duration. The hypnotherapeutic ones are often repeated in multiple sessions before they achieve peak effectiveness.<ref>{{cite book|last=Barrett|first=Deirdre| name-list-style = vanc |title=The Pregnant Man: Cases from a Hypnotherapist's Couch|year=1998|publisher=Times Books}}</ref> |
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====Alpha- and Theta-state theories==== |
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Through data collected by [[Electroencephalography]] (EEGs), four major brain-wave patterns—frequency of electrical impulses firing from the brain—have been identified. The Beta state (alert/working) is defined as 14–32 cycles per second (CPS), the Alpha state (relaxed/reflecting) as the 7–14 CPS, the Theta state (drowsy) as 4–7 CPS, and the Delta state (sleeping/dreaming/deep sleep) as approximately 3–5 CPS. |
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=== Conscious and unconscious mind === |
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One physiological definition of hypnosis states that the brainwave level necessary to work on issues such as stopping smoking, weight management, reduction of phobias, sports improvement, etc., is the alpha state. The alpha state is commonly associated with closing one's eyes, relaxation, and daydreaming... |
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Some hypnotists view suggestion as a form of communication that is directed primarily to the subject's conscious mind,<ref name="Rossi">{{cite journal |url=http://www.studiopsicologiamantova.it/psy/psicologia/miltonerickson/what-is-a-suggestion.pdf |title=What is a suggestion? The neuroscience of implicit processing heuristics in therapeutic hypnosis and psychotherapy |first1=Ernest L. |last1=Rossi |first2=Kathryn L. |last2=Rossi |name-list-style=vanc |date=April 2007 |journal=American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis |volume=49 |issue=4 |pages=267–81 |doi=10.1080/00029157.2007.10524504 |pmid=17444364 |s2cid=12202594 |access-date=24 April 2013 |archive-date=28 December 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131228151737/http://www.studiopsicologiamantova.it/psy/psicologia/miltonerickson/what-is-a-suggestion.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> whereas others view it as a means of communicating with the "[[unconscious mind|unconscious]]" or "[[subconscious]]" mind.<ref name="Rossi"/><ref>{{cite web |url=http://bscw.rediris.es/pub/bscw.cgi/d4523426/Lovatt-Hypnosis_suggestion.pdf |title=Hypnosis and suggestion |last=Lovatt |first=William F. |name-list-style=vanc |publisher=Rider & Co |date=1933{{ndash}}34 |access-date=24 April 2013 |archive-date=4 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304115910/http://bscw.rediris.es/pub/bscw.cgi/d4523426/Lovatt-Hypnosis_suggestion.pdf |url-status=dead}}</ref> These concepts were introduced into hypnotism at the end of the 19th century by [[Sigmund Freud]] and [[Pierre Janet]]. Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory describes conscious thoughts as being at the surface of the mind and unconscious processes as being deeper in the mind.<ref>Daniel L. Schacter; Daniel T. Gilbert; Daniel M. Wegner, ''Psychology'', 2009, 2011</ref> Braid, Bernheim, and other Victorian pioneers of hypnotism did not refer to the unconscious mind but saw hypnotic suggestions as being addressed to the subject's ''conscious'' mind. Indeed, Braid actually defines hypnotism as focused (conscious) attention upon a dominant idea (or suggestion). Different views regarding the nature of the mind have led to different conceptions of suggestion. Hypnotists who believe that responses are mediated primarily by an "unconscious mind", like [[Milton Erickson]], make use of indirect suggestions such as metaphors or stories whose intended meaning may be concealed from the subject's conscious mind. The concept of [[Subliminal message|subliminal suggestion]] depends upon this view of the mind. By contrast, hypnotists who believe that responses to suggestion are primarily mediated by the conscious mind, such as [[Theodore X. Barber|Theodore Barber]] and [[Nicholas Spanos]], have tended to make more use of direct verbal suggestions and instructions.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Spanos |first1=Nicholas P. |last2=Barber |first2=Theodore X. |date=1974 |title=Toward a convergence in hypnosis research. |url=http://doi.apa.org/getdoi.cfm?doi=10.1037/h0036795 |journal=American Psychologist |language=en |volume=29 |issue=7 |pages=500–511 |doi=10.1037/h0036795 |pmid=4416672 |issn=1935-990X |access-date=28 September 2022 |archive-date=2 July 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163814/https://psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?doi=10.1037/h0036795 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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=== Ideo-dynamic reflex === |
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Another physiological definition states that the theta state is required for therapeutic change. The theta state is associated with hypnosis for [[surgery]], hypnoanesthesia and hypnoanalgesia, which occur more readily in the theta and delta states. It should be noted that hypnoanalgesia of the skin is a common test for somnambulism. Arm and body [[catalepsy]] are one of a few tests done to determine readiness for these surgical applications. |
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{{Main|Ideomotor response}} |
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The first neuropsychological theory of hypnotic suggestion was introduced early by James Braid who adopted his friend and colleague [[William Benjamin Carpenter|William Carpenter's]] theory of the [[ideo motor response|ideo-motor reflex response]] to account for the phenomenon of hypnotism. Carpenter had observed from close examination of everyday experience that, under certain circumstances, the mere idea of a muscular movement could be sufficient to produce a reflexive, or automatic, contraction or movement of the muscles involved, albeit in a very small degree. Braid extended Carpenter's theory to encompass the observation that a wide variety of bodily responses besides muscular movement can be thus affected, for example, the idea of sucking a lemon can automatically stimulate salivation, a secretory response. Braid, therefore, adopted the term "ideo-dynamic", meaning "by the power of an idea", to explain a broad range of "psycho-physiological" (mind–body) phenomena. Braid coined the term "mono-ideodynamic" to refer to the theory that hypnotism operates by concentrating attention on a single idea in order to amplify the ideo-dynamic reflex response. Variations of the basic ideo-motor, or ideo-dynamic, theory of suggestion have continued to exercise considerable influence over subsequent theories of hypnosis, including those of [[Clark L. Hull]], [[Hans Eysenck]], and Ernest Rossi.<ref name="Rossi"/> In Victorian psychology the word "idea" encompasses any mental representation, including mental imagery, memories, etc. |
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== Susceptibility == |
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However, it is important to reflect upon the fact that both arm and body [[catalepsy]] can be induced in normal non-hypnotised subjects. Indeed, arm catalepsy is a standard stage-hypnotist's test of susceptibility. Moreover, normal, non-hypnotised subjects can be found in any of these states of cortical arousal without also displaying any of the behaviour, traits or the enhanced suggestibility associated with being hypnotised. |
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{{Main|Hypnotic susceptibility}} |
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Braid made a rough distinction between different stages of hypnosis, which he termed the first and second conscious stage of hypnotism;<ref name="auto1">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Vs35STwQYQoC|title=The Discovery of Hypnosis: The Complete Writings of James Braid, the Father of Hypnotherapy|first=James|last=Braid|date=11 July 2008|publisher=UKCHH Ltd|isbn=9780956057006|via=Google Books|access-date=7 November 2015|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702162805/https://books.google.com/books?id=Vs35STwQYQoC|url-status=live}}</ref> he later replaced this with a distinction between "sub-hypnotic", "full hypnotic", and "hypnotic coma" stages.<ref name="auto1"/> [[Jean-Martin Charcot]] made a similar distinction between stages which he named somnambulism, lethargy, and catalepsy. However, [[Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault]] and Hippolyte Bernheim introduced more complex hypnotic "depth" scales based on a combination of behavioural, physiological, and subjective responses, some of which were due to direct suggestion and some of which were not. In the first few decades of the 20th century, these early clinical "depth" scales were superseded by more sophisticated "hypnotic susceptibility" scales based on experimental research. The most influential were the Davis–Husband and Friedlander–Sarbin scales developed in the 1930s. [[André Muller Weitzenhoffer|André Weitzenhoffer]] and [[Ernest R. Hilgard]] developed the Stanford Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility in 1959, consisting of 12 suggestion test items following a standardised hypnotic eye-fixation induction script, and this has become one of the most widely referenced research tools in the field of hypnosis. Soon after, in 1962, Ronald Shor and Emily Carota Orne developed a similar group scale called the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility (HGSHS). |
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Whereas the older "depth scales" tried to infer the level of "hypnotic trance" from supposed observable signs such as spontaneous amnesia, most subsequent scales have measured the degree of observed or self-evaluated ''responsiveness'' to specific suggestion tests such as direct suggestions of arm rigidity (catalepsy). The Stanford, Harvard, HIP, and most other susceptibility scales convert numbers into an assessment of a person's susceptibility as "high", "medium", or "low". Approximately 80% of the population are medium, 10% are high, and 10% are low. There is some controversy as to whether this is distributed on a "normal" bell-shaped curve or whether it is bi-modal with a small "blip" of people at the high end.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Piccione C, Hilgard ER, Zimbardo PG | title = On the degree of stability of measured hypnotizability over a 25-year period | journal = Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | volume = 56 | issue = 2 | pages = 289–95 | date = February 1989 | pmid = 2926631 | doi = 10.1037/0022-3514.56.2.289 | citeseerx = 10.1.1.586.1971}}</ref> Hypnotisability scores are highly stable over a person's lifetime. Research by Deirdre Barrett has found that there are two distinct types of highly susceptible subjects, which she terms fantasisers and dissociaters. Fantasisers score high on absorption scales, find it easy to block out real-world stimuli without hypnosis, spend much time daydreaming, report imaginary companions as a child, and grew up with parents who encouraged imaginary play. Dissociaters often have a history of childhood abuse or other trauma, learned to escape into numbness, and to forget unpleasant events. Their association to "daydreaming" was often going blank rather than creating vividly recalled fantasies. Both score equally high on formal scales of hypnotic susceptibility.<ref>Barrett, Deirdre. Deep Trance Subjects: A Schema of Two Distinct Subgroups. in R. Kunzendorf (Ed.) Imagery: Recent Developments, NY: Plenum Press, 1991, pp. 101–12.</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Barrett D | title = Fantasizers and dissociaters: data on two distinct subgroups of deep trance subjects | journal = Psychological Reports | volume = 71 | issue = 3 Pt 1 | pages = 1011–14 | date = December 1992 | pmid = 1454907 | doi = 10.2466/pr0.1992.71.3.1011 | s2cid = 44878822}}</ref><ref>Barrett, Deirdre. Fantasizers and Dissociaters: Two types of High Hypnotizables, Two Imagery Styles. in R. Kuzendorf, N. Spanos, & B. Wallace (Eds.) Hypnosis and Imagination, NY: Baywood, 1996 {{ISBN|0-89503-139-6}}</ref> |
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====T.X. Barber==== |
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Barber theorizes that hypnosis is not a state or a trance and is not produced as the result of suggestions. He believes that hypnosis is based on a number of overlapping variables, but, primarily, that interpersonal relationships allow the operator to restructure perceptions and conceptions of the subject. He theorizes that this occurs because the subject is relatively inattentive to the environment and, because of this misdirection of attention, the subject is willing to think as the hypnotist wants them to think.<ref>Barber, T.X.: ''The concept of hypnosis''. The American Journal of Psychology, 45: 115, 1958.</ref> |
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Individuals with [[dissociative identity disorder]] have the highest hypnotisability of any [[clinic]]al group, followed by those with [[post-traumatic stress disorder]].<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Spiegel D, Loewenstein RJ, Lewis-Fernández R, Sar V, Simeon D, Vermetten E, Cardeña E, Dell PF | title = Dissociative disorders in DSM-5 | journal = Depression and Anxiety | volume = 28 | issue = 9 | pages = 824–52 | date = September 2011 | pmid = 21910187 | doi = 10.1002/da.20874 | s2cid = 46518635 | url = http://dsm5.org/Documents/Anxiety,%20OC%20Spectrum,%20PTSD,%20and%20DD%20Group/PTSD%20and%20DD/Spiegel%20et%20al_Dissociative%20Disorders.pdf | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20130501231851/http://dsm5.org/Documents/Anxiety%2C%20OC%20Spectrum%2C%20PTSD%2C%20and%20DD%20Group/PTSD%20and%20DD/Spiegel%20et%20al_Dissociative%20Disorders.pdf | df = dmy-all | url-status = dead | archive-date = 1 May 2013}}</ref> |
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====Harry Cannon==== |
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[[Harry Cannon FNRAH]] defines hypnosis: "a psychological mechanism by which a suggestion moves directly to and is accepted by the subconscious mind." For this (hypnosis) to take place you require four things: |
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== Applications == |
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1. A focus of attention |
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There are numerous applications for hypnosis across multiple fields of interest, including medical/psychotherapeutic uses, military uses, self-improvement, and entertainment. The [[American Medical Association]] currently has no official stance on the medical use of hypnosis. |
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2. A heightened emotion |
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3. The suggestion itself |
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4. No critique of the suggestion by the conscious intellect. |
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Hypnosis has been used as a supplemental approach to [[cognitive behavioral therapy]] since as early as 1949. Hypnosis was defined in relation to [[classical conditioning]]; where the words of the therapist were the stimuli and the hypnosis would be the conditioned response. Some traditional cognitive behavioral therapy methods were based in classical conditioning. It would include inducing a [[Relaxation (psychology)|relaxed]] state and introducing a feared stimulus. One way of inducing the relaxed state was through hypnosis.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Chapman|first1=Robin|title=Clinical Use of Hypnosis in Cognitive Behavior Therapy: A Practitioner's Casebook|year=2005|publisher=Springer Publisher Company|page=6}}</ref> |
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When these four requirements are met, suggestion takes root in the subconscious and so has action out in motor function. This simply means that the suggestion is acted upon by the mind. |
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Hypnotism has also been used in [[forensics]], [[sports hypnosis|sports]], education, [[physical therapy]], and [[drug rehabilitation|rehabilitation]].<ref name="André">André M. Weitzenbhoffer. ''The Practice of Hypnotism'' 2nd ed, Toronto, John Wiley & Son Inc., Chapter 16, pp. 583–87, 2000 {{ISBN|0-471-29790-9}}</ref> Hypnotism has also been employed by artists for creative purposes, most notably the surrealist circle of [[André Breton]] who employed hypnosis, [[automatic writing]], and sketches for creative purposes. Hypnotic methods have been used to re-experience drug states<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Fogel S, Hoffer A | title = The use of hypnosis to interrupt and to reproduce an LSD-25 experience | journal = Journal of Clinical and Experimental Psychopathology & Quarterly Review of Psychiatry and Neurology | volume = 23 | pages = 11–16 | year = 1962 | pmid = 13893766}}</ref> and mystical experiences.<ref>{{cite journal| vauthors = Van Quekelberghe R, Göbel P, Hertweck E |year=1995|title=Simulation of near-death and out-of-body experiences under hypnosis|journal= Imagination, Cognition & Personality|volume= 14|issue=2|pages=151–64|doi=10.2190/gdfw-xlel-enql-5wq6|s2cid=145579925}}</ref><ref>[http://counselinginoregon.com/mysticalexperience "Using Hypnosis to Encourage Mystical Experience"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100129194407/http://counselinginoregon.com/mysticalexperience |date=29 January 2010}}. Counselinginoregon.com. Retrieved on 1 October 2011.</ref> Self-hypnosis is popularly used to [[Smoking cessation|quit smoking]], alleviate stress and anxiety, promote [[weight loss]], and induce sleep hypnosis. Stage hypnosis can persuade people to perform unusual public feats.<ref>[http://www.stagehypnosisshow.co.uk/history-stage-hypnotist-stage-hypnosis-shows/ "History of the Stage Hypnotist and Stage Hypnosis Shows."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201032613/http://www.stagehypnosisshow.co.uk/history-stage-hypnotist-stage-hypnosis-shows/ |date=1 December 2017}}. stagehypnosisshow.co.uk. Retrieved on 23 January 2015.</ref> |
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At: [http://www.hypnoanalyst.com] Harry postulates that all our learning is via the modality of hypnosis. He gives the following example: “Imagine a small child being caught by their mother taking something that does not belong to them from another child. Imagine then the mother chastising her child for this action (the child now has a focus of attention and a heightened emotion). She then instructs her child to stop it and not do it again (the given suggestion). This suggestion, laid down during the child’s formative years has, by the criteria above, moved to the subconscious mind without any intellectual argument from the child. Because of this experience, a new social boundary has now been placed upon the child who, in later life will definitely ‘feel’ those same feelings and emotions whenever it finds itself in a similar situation”. |
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Some people have drawn analogies between certain aspects of hypnotism and areas such as [[crowd psychology]], religious hysteria, and ritual trances in preliterate tribal cultures.<ref name="Wier">{{cite book|last=Wier|first=Dennis R| name-list-style = vanc |year=1996|title=Trance: from magic to technology|publisher=TransMedia|location=Ann Arbor, MI|isbn=978-1-888428-38-4}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> |
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So hypnosis is all around us and is happening all the time. The level and apparent intensity of the ‘hypnotic state’ is nothing more than the witnessing of an individuals subjective experience of it, and nothing more. |
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=== |
=== Hypnotherapy === |
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{{Main|Hypnotherapy}} |
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[[Joe Griffin]] defines hypnosis, based upon his dream research, as "any artificial means of accessing the REM state". All hypnotic phenomena including amnesia, anaesthesia, analgesia, arm levitation, body illusions, ideomotor responses, catalepsy, age regression, post hypnotic responses, time distortion, dissociation, and hallucination are some properties of the REM state which he identifies as the natural programming state of the brain. <ref>— Joe Griffin & Ivan Tyrrell, ''Human Givens: A new approach to emotional health and clear thinking'', HG Publishing Ltd, 2004 ISBN 1-899398-31-7 (page 64).</ref> |
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{{POV section|date=January 2019}} |
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Hypnotherapy is a use of hypnosis in psychotherapy.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://umm.edu/health/medical/altmed/treatment/hypnotherapy|title=Hypnotherapy | University of Maryland Medical Center|date=27 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130627092448/https://umm.edu/health/medical/altmed/treatment/hypnotherapy |archive-date=27 June 2013 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.asch.com.au/general-public/faq#6|title=Australian Society of Clinical Hypnotherapists|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160126162841/https://www.asch.com.au/general-public/faq#6|archive-date=26 January 2016}}</ref> It is used by licensed physicians, psychologists, and others. Physicians and psychologists may use hypnosis to treat depression, anxiety, [[eating disorder]]s, [[sleep disorder]]s, [[Problem gambling|compulsive gambling]], [[phobias]] and [[Post-traumatic stress disorder|post-traumatic stress]],<ref name="PregnantMan">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=O_cEAAAACAAJ|title=The Pregnant Man: Tales from a Hypnotherapist's Couch|author=Deirdre Barrett|publisher=NY: Times Books/Random House|edition=1998/hardback, 1999 paper|isbn=978-0-8129-2905-8|date=1998|access-date=7 November 2015|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163828/https://books.google.com/books?id=O_cEAAAACAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author=Assen Alladin|title=Cognitive hypnotherapy: an integrated approach to the treatment of emotional disorders|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B0hMPgAACAAJ|access-date=30 October 2011|year=2008|publisher=J. Wiley|isbn=978-0-470-03251-0|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163814/https://books.google.com/books?id=B0hMPgAACAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref> while certified hypnotherapists who are not physicians or psychologists often treat smoking and weight management. Hypnotherapy was historically used in psychiatric and legal settings to enhance the recall of repressed or degraded memories, but this application of the technique has declined as scientific evidence accumulated that hypnotherapy can increase confidence in [[false memories]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Lynn |first1=Steven Jay |title=Myths and misconceptions about hypnosis and suggestion: Separating fact and fiction |journal=Applied Cognitive Psychology |date=11 August 2020 |volume=34 |issue=6 |page=1260 |doi=10.1002/acp.3730 |s2cid=225412389 |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/acp.3730 |access-date=27 September 2022 |archive-date=27 September 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220927160328/https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/acp.3730 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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Hypnotherapy is viewed as a helpful adjunct by proponents, having additive effects when treating psychological disorders, such as these, along with scientifically proven [[Cognitive therapy|cognitive therapies]]. The effectiveness of hypnotherapy has not yet been accurately assessed,<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Flammer | first1=Erich | last2=Bongartz | first2=Walter |name-list-style=vanc | title=On the efficacy of hypnosis: a meta-analytic study | journal=Contemporary Hypnosis | publisher=Wiley | volume=20 | issue=4 | year=2006 | issn=0960-5290 | doi=10.1002/ch.277 | pages=179–197 |url=http://www.hypnose-kikh.de/content/Metaanalyse-Flammer-2004.pdf |language=en |access-date=11 January 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160222004606/http://www.hypnose-kikh.de/content/Metaanalyse-Flammer-2004.pdf |archive-date=22 February 2016 |url-status=dead}}</ref> and, due to the lack of evidence indicating any level of efficiency,<ref name="Barnes, J. 2019">{{cite journal | last1=Barnes | first1=Joanne | last2=McRobbie | first2=Hayden | last3=Dong | first3=Christine Y | last4=Walker | first4=Natalie | last5=Hartmann-Boyce | first5=Jamie |name-list-style=vanc | title=Hypnotherapy for smoking cessation | journal=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | publisher=Wiley | volume=2019 | issue=6 | date=2019-06-14 | pages=CD001008 | issn=1465-1858 | doi=10.1002/14651858.cd001008.pub3 | doi-access=free | pmid=31198991 | pmc=6568235 }}</ref> it is regarded as a type of [[alternative medicine]] by numerous reputable medical organisations, such as the [[National Health Service]].<ref>{{cite web| url = https://www.healthcareers.nhs.uk/explore-roles/wider-healthcare-team/roles-wider-healthcare-team/clinical-support-staff/complementary-and-alternative-medicine-cam| url-status = dead| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180626164403/https://www.healthcareers.nhs.uk/explore-roles/wider-healthcare-team/roles-wider-healthcare-team/clinical-support-staff/complementary-and-alternative-medicine-cam| archive-date = 26 June 2018| title = Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) {{!}} Health Careers}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url = https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hypnotherapy/|title = Hypnotherapy|date = 19 January 2018|access-date = 10 March 2019|archive-date = 11 August 2021|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210811220950/https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/hypnotherapy/|url-status = live}}</ref> |
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==Theories== |
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A scientific [[theory]] attempts to describe and explain the behaviour of a natural or social phenomenon, following the principles of the [[scientific method]]. Good theories produce testable [[hypotheses]] which can be supported or refuted by experimental data. There are unfortunately many vague and untestable theories of hypnosis which continue to circulate, but high quality research is still published in peer-reviewed scientific journals. |
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Preliminary research has expressed brief hypnosis interventions as possibly being a useful tool for managing painful HIV-DSP because of its history of usefulness in [[pain management]], its long-term effectiveness of brief interventions, the ability to teach self-hypnosis to patients, the cost-effectiveness of the intervention, and the advantage of using such an intervention as opposed to the use of pharmaceutical drugs.<ref name="Lynn SJ 2015"/> |
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Some theories of hypnosis attempt to describe hypnotic phenomenon in terms of brain activity while others concentrate more on the phenomenological experience. In either case, a fundamental distinction is between 'state' and 'non-state' theories of hypnosis. State theorists believe that an [[altered state of consciousness]] is a core part of hypnosis, whereas non-state theorists believe that more mundane psychological processess such as focussed attention and expectation are sufficient to explain hypnotic phenomena. The precise definition of what constitutes an altered state of consciousness is a matter of some debate. Although many people who are hypnotised describe their experience as 'altered' it is difficult to use these terms in the absence of a prior definition. |
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Modern hypnotherapy has been used, with varying success, in a variety of forms, such as: |
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===Dissociation and neodissociation theories=== |
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{{div col|colwidth=30em}} |
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[[Pierre Janet]] originally developed the idea of [[dissociation]], literally a splitting-off of some components of consciousness, as a result of his work with hysterical patients. He believed that hypnosis was an example of dissociation: areas of an individual's behavioral control are split off from ordinary awareness. In this case, hypnosis would remove some control from the conscious mind and the individual will respond with autonomic, reflexive behavior. Weitzenhoffer describes hypnosis via this theory as "[[dissociation]] of awareness from the majority of sensory and even strictly neural events taking place."<ref>Weitzenhoffer, A.M.: ''Hypnotism - An Objective Study in Suggestability''. New York, Wiley, 1953.</ref> |
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* [[Addiction]]s<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kraft T, Kraft D |year=2005 |title=Covert sensitization revisited: Six case studies |url=http://www.londonpsychotherapy.co.uk/pdf/1.pdf |journal=Contemporary Hypnosis |volume=22 |issue=4 |pages=202–09 |doi=10.1002/ch.10 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120119123828/http://www.londonpsychotherapy.co.uk/pdf/1.pdf |archive-date=19 January 2012}}</ref><ref name="Elkins">{{cite journal | vauthors = Elkins GR, Rajab MH | title = Clinical hypnosis for smoking cessation: preliminary results of a three-session intervention | journal = The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | volume = 52 | issue = 1 | pages = 73–81 | date = January 2004 | pmid = 14768970 | doi = 10.1076/iceh.52.1.73.23921 | s2cid = 6065271}}</ref> |
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* [[Age regression in therapy|Age regression hypnotherapy]] (or "hypnoanalysis") |
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* Cognitive-behavioural hypnotherapy, or clinical hypnosis combined with elements of cognitive behavioural therapy<ref name="Robertson_2012">{{cite book| author=Robertson, D| title=The Practice of Cognitive-Behavioural Hypnotherapy: A Manual for Evidence-Based Clinical Hypnosis| year=2012| publisher=Karnac| location=London| isbn=978-1-85575-530-7| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=um6_7kEszusC| access-date=7 November 2015| archive-date=2 July 2023| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163310/https://books.google.com/books?id=um6_7kEszusC| url-status=live}}</ref> |
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* [[Milton H. Erickson#Ericksonian approaches|Ericksonian hypnotherapy]] |
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* Fears and [[phobia]]<ref>{{cite journal |title=Hypnosis with a blind 55-year-old female with dental phobia requiring periodontal treatment and extraction | vauthors = Gow MA |year=2006 |journal=Contemporary Hypnosis |volume=23 |pages=92–100 |issue=2 |doi=10.1002/ch.313}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.lcch.co.uk/hypnosisarticles/case_phobia.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050629025402/http://www.lcch.co.uk/hypnosisarticles/case_phobia.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 June 2005 | vauthors = Nicholson J |title=Hypnotherapy – Case History – Phobia |journal=London College of Clinical Hypnosis}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.stichtingemetofobie.nl/pdf/a_vomiting_phobia_overcome_by_one_session_of_flooding_with_hypnosis.pdf |vauthors=Wijesnghe B |year=1974 |title=A vomiting phobia overcome by one session of flooding with hypnosis |journal=Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry |volume=5 |pages=169–70 |doi=10.1016/0005-7916(74)90107-4 |issue=2 |access-date=5 May 2013 |archive-date=8 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308134532/http://www.stichtingemetofobie.nl/pdf/a_vomiting_phobia_overcome_by_one_session_of_flooding_with_hypnosis.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Deyoub PL, Epstein SJ | title = Short-term hypnotherapy for the treatment of flight phobia: a case report | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 19 | issue = 4 | pages = 251–54 | date = April 1977 | pmid = 879063 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.1977.10403885}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Hypnosis+in+the+treatment+of+social+phobia.-a0229529946 |title=Hypnosis in the treatment of social phobia |last=Rogers |first=Janet |name-list-style=vanc |date=May 2008 |journal=Australian Journal of Clinical & Experimental Hypnosis |volume=36 |pages=64–68 |issue=1 |access-date=5 May 2013 |archive-date=30 April 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210430213739/https://www.thefreelibrary.com/Hypnosis+in+the+treatment+of+social+phobia.-a0229529946 |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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* Habit control<ref name="Mayo">{{cite web|url=http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hypnosis/SA00084 |title=Hypnosis. Another way to manage pain, kick bad habits |publisher=mayoclinic.com |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091204153926/http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hypnosis/sa00084 |archive-date=4 December 2009}}</ref><ref name="Anbar">{{cite journal | vauthors = Anbar RD | title = Childhood habit cough treated with consultation by telephone: a case report | journal = Cough | volume = 5 | issue = 2 | pages = 2 | date = January 2009 | pmid = 19159469 | pmc = 2632985 | doi = 10.1186/1745-9974-5-2 | citeseerx = 10.1.1.358.6608 | doi-access = free }}</ref><ref name="McNeilly">{{cite journal | vauthors = McNeilly R | title = Solution oriented hypnosis. An effective approach in medical practice | journal = Australian Family Physician | volume = 23 | issue = 9 | pages = 1744–46 | date = September 1994 | pmid = 7980173}}</ref> |
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* Pain management<ref>[http://www.webmd.com/balance/features/hypnosis-for-pain "Hypnosis for Pain."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210731212842/https://www.webmd.com/pain-management/hypnosis-meditation-and-relaxation-for-pain-treatment |date=31 July 2021 }}. Webmd.com. Retrieved on 1 October 2011.</ref><ref name="Dahlgren">{{cite journal | vauthors = Dahlgren LA, Kurtz RM, Strube MJ, Malone MD | title = Differential effects of hypnotic suggestion on multiple dimensions of pain | journal = Journal of Pain and Symptom Management | volume = 10 | issue = 6 | pages = 464–70 | date = August 1995 | pmid = 7561229 | doi = 10.1016/0885-3924(95)00055-4 | doi-access = free}}</ref><ref name="Patterson1">{{cite journal | vauthors = Patterson DR, Ptacek JT | title = Baseline pain as a moderator of hypnotic analgesia for burn injury treatment | journal = Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | volume = 65 | issue = 1 | pages = 60–67 | date = February 1997 | pmid = 9103735 | doi = 10.1037/0022-006X.65.1.60}}</ref><ref name="Barrett2004">{{cite web |url=https://www.apa.org/research/action/hypnosis |title=Hypnosis for the Relief and Control of Pain |author=American Psychological Association |date=2 July 2004 |publisher=American Psychological Association |access-date=28 September 2020 |archive-date=25 July 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210725212840/https://www.apa.org/research/action/hypnosis |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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* Psychotherapy<ref>Barrett, Deirdre. [http://psychologytoday.com/articles/pto-20010101-000034.html "The Power of Hypnosis."]. ''Psychology Today''. Jan/Feb 2001 {{webarchive |url=https://archive.today/20071107103604/http://psychologytoday.com/articles/pto-20010101-000034.html |date=7 November 2007}}</ref> |
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* Relaxation<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Vickers A, Zollman C | title = ABC of complementary medicine. Hypnosis and relaxation therapies | journal = BMJ | volume = 319 | issue = 7221 | pages = 1346–49 | date = November 1999 | pmid = 10567143 | pmc = 1117083 | doi = 10.1136/bmj.319.7221.1346}}</ref> |
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* Reduce patient behavior (e.g., scratching) that hinders the treatment of skin disease<ref>Shenefelt, Philip D. [http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/466140 "Applying Hypnosis in Dermatology] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210430185238/https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/466140 |date=30 April 2021 }}. medscape.com. 6 January 2004</ref> |
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* Soothing anxious surgical patients |
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* Sports performance<ref>[http://www.awss.com/sport02.htm Hypnosis and Sport Performance] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210224122733/http://www.awss.com/sport02.htm |date=24 February 2021 }}. AWSS.com</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.zoneofexcellence.ca/Journal/Issue06/Hypnosis.pdf |title=The effects of hypnosis on flow-states and performance |vauthors=Pates J, Palmi J |year=2002 |journal=Journal of Excellence |volume=6 |pages=48–461 |access-date=5 May 2013 |archive-date=7 March 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210307205223/http://www.zoneofexcellence.ca/Journal/Issue06/Hypnosis.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> |
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* Weight loss<ref name="ReferenceA">{{cite journal | vauthors = Kirsch I | title = Hypnotic enhancement of cognitive-behavioral weight loss treatments – another meta-reanalysis | journal = Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | volume = 64 | issue = 3 | pages = 517–19 | date = June 1996 | pmid = 8698945 | doi = 10.1037/0022-006X.64.3.517 | s2cid = 18091380 }}</ref><ref name="Bolocofsky">{{cite journal | vauthors = Bolocofsky DN, Spinler D, Coulthard-Morris L | title = Effectiveness of hypnosis as an adjunct to behavioral weight management | journal = Journal of Clinical Psychology | volume = 41 | issue = 1 | pages = 35–41 | date = January 1985 | pmid = 3973038 | doi = 10.1002/1097-4679(198501)41:1<35::AID-JCLP2270410107>3.0.CO;2-Z | url = http://www.hypnoprogram.com/documents/Three_Studies_WL_Hypnosis.pdf | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131208195457/http://www.hypnoprogram.com/documents/Three_Studies_WL_Hypnosis.pdf | url-status = dead | archive-date = 8 December 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Cochrane G, Friesen J | title = Hypnotherapy in weight loss treatment | journal = Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | volume = 54 | issue = 4 | pages = 489–92 | date = August 1986 | pmid = 3745601 | doi = 10.1037/0022-006X.54.4.489 | url = http://www.hypnoprogram.com/documents/Three_Studies_WL_Hypnosis.pdf | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131208195457/http://www.hypnoprogram.com/documents/Three_Studies_WL_Hypnosis.pdf | url-status = dead | archive-date = 8 December 2013}}</ref> |
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{{div col end}} |
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In a January 2001 article in ''[[Psychology Today]]'',<ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/200101/the-power-hypnosis |title=The Power of Hypnosis |first=Deirdre |last=Barrett |magazine=Psychology Today |issue=Jan/Feb |year=2001}}</ref> Harvard psychologist [[Deirdre Barrett]] wrote: |
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{{blockquote|text=A hypnotic trance is not therapeutic in and of itself, but specific suggestions and images fed to clients in a trance can profoundly alter their behavior. As they rehearse the new ways they want to think and feel, they lay the groundwork for changes in their future actions... }} Barrett described specific ways this is operationalised for habit change and amelioration of phobias. In her 1998 book of hypnotherapy case studies,<ref name="PregnantMan"/> she reviews the clinical research on hypnosis with dissociative disorders, smoking cessation, and insomnia, and describes successful treatments of these complaints. |
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In a July 2001 article for ''[[Scientific American]]'' titled "The Truth and the Hype of Hypnosis", Michael Nash wrote that, "using hypnosis, scientists have temporarily created hallucinations, compulsions, certain types of memory loss, false memories, and delusions in the laboratory so that these phenomena can be studied in a controlled environment."<ref name="Nash"/> |
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[[Ernest Hilgard]] developed Janet's ideas and published his neodissociation theory in 1977. His theory, a classic 'state' theory, postulated an executive ego (essentially a central executive system in today's cognitive psychological terms) which became dissociated from sub-components via an 'amnesic barrier'. Suggestions from a hypnotist could produce alterations in perception and behaviour, which were explainable in terms of these dissociated sub-systems. Hilgard's ideas were influenced by his discovery of the 'hidden observer' phenomenon, a process by which different components of consciousness were investigated (other researchers, notably Spanos, believed the hidden observer to be an experimental artifact). |
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==== Menopause ==== |
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===Social constructionism / Role-playing theory=== |
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There is evidence supporting the use of hypnotherapy in the treatment of [[menopause]] related symptoms, including [[hot flash]]es.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Hickey|first1=Martha|last2=Szabo|first2=Rebecca A.|last3=Hunter|first3=Myra S.|date=2017-11-23|title=Non-hormonal treatments for menopausal symptoms|url=https://www.bmj.com/content/359/bmj.j5101|journal=BMJ|language=en|volume=359|pages=j5101|doi=10.1136/bmj.j5101|issn=0959-8138|pmid=29170264|s2cid=46856968|access-date=7 September 2021|archive-date=7 September 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210907105558/https://www.bmj.com/content/359/bmj.j5101|url-status=live}}</ref> The [[North American Menopause Society]] recommends hypnotherapy for the nonhormonal management of menopause-associated [[vasomotor]] symptoms, giving it the highest level of evidence.<ref name="auto"/> |
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<!-- (Kroger, 1977, p. 29) --> |
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This theory suggests that individuals are playing a role and allowing the hypnotist to create a reality for them. This relationship depends on how much rapport has been established between the hypnotist and the subject (see [[Hawthorne effect]], [[Pygmalion effect]], and the [[Placebo effect]]). |
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==== Irritable bowel syndrome ==== |
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Generally, under hypnosis people become more receptive to suggestion, causing changes in the way they feel, think, and behave. Some psychologists (such as Sarbin and Spanos) have suggested that hypnosis is a social construct, so well-known that strong social expectations are played out by subjects, who believe they are in a state of hypnosis, behaving in a way that they imagine a hypnotized person would behave. Much experimental work has demonstrated that the experiences of hypnotized subjects can be dramatically shaped by expectations and social nuances. This view is often misunderstood: it does not discount the claim that hypnotized individuals are truly experiencing suggested effects, just that the mechanism by which this has taken place has in part been socially constructed and is not necessarily reliant on the idea of an [[altered state of consciousness]] |
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Hypnotherapy has been studied for the treatment of [[irritable bowel syndrome]].<ref>Moore, M. & Tasso, A.F. 'Clinical hypnosis: the empirical evidence' in The Oxford Handbook of Hypnosis (2008) {{ISBN|0-19-857009-0}} pp. 718–19</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Gonsalkorale WM, Whorwell PJ | title = Hypnotherapy in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome | journal = European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | volume = 17 | issue = 1 | pages = 15–20 | date = January 2005 | pmid = 15647634 | doi = 10.1097/00042737-200501000-00004 | s2cid = 28967219 }}</ref> Hypnosis for IBS has received moderate support in the [[National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence]] guidance published for UK health services.<ref>[http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/IBSFullGuideline.pdf NICE Guidance for IBS]. (PDF) . Retrieved on 1 October 2011. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121008122956/http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/pdf/IBSFullGuideline.pdf |date=8 October 2012}}</ref> It has been used as an aid or alternative to chemical [[anesthesia]],<ref>"Physician Studies Hypnosis As Sedation Alternative," University of Iowa News Service, 6 February 2003 [http://www.news-releases.uiowa.edu/2003/february/020603hypnosis.html News-releases.uiowa.edu] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171117205127/http://news-releases.uiowa.edu/2003/february/020603hypnosis.html |date=17 November 2017}}</ref><ref>[http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/74727.php Pain Decreases Under Hypnosis] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090103112335/http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/74727.php |date=3 January 2009 }}. Medicalnewstoday.com. 20 June 2007</ref><ref>John F. Kihlstrom, University of California, Berkeley and Institute for the Study of Healthcare Organizations &Transactions [http://www.institute-shot.com/hypnosis_pain_utility.htm Hypnosis in Surgery: Efficacy, Specificity, and Utility]. Institute-shot.com {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081219015819/http://www.institute-shot.com/hypnosis_pain_utility.htm |date=19 December 2008}}</ref> and it has been studied as a way to soothe skin ailments.<ref>[http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hypnosis/SA00084 Hypnosis]. Mayoclinic.com {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080828235509/http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/hypnosis/SA00084 |date=28 August 2008}}</ref> |
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==== Pain management ==== |
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A number of studies show that hypnosis can reduce the pain experienced during burn-wound [[debridement]],<ref name="Patterson">{{cite journal | vauthors = Patterson DR, Questad KA, de Lateur BJ | title = Hypnotherapy as an adjunct to narcotic analgesia for the treatment of pain for burn debridement | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 31 | issue = 3 | pages = 156–63 | date = January 1989 | pmid = 2563925 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.1989.10402884}}</ref> bone marrow aspirations, and [[childbirth]].<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.papelesdelpsicologo.es/english/1699.pdf | vauthors = Mendoza ME, Capafons A |year=2009 |title=Efficacy of clinical hypnosis: A summary of its empirical evidence |journal=Papeles del Psicólogo |volume=30 |pages=98–116 |issue=2 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130108013040/http://www.papelesdelpsicologo.es/english/1699.pdf |archive-date=8 January 2013}}</ref><ref name="Ewin">{{cite journal |url=http://bscw.rediris.es/pub/bscw.cgi/d4523306/Ewin-Use_hypnosis_treatment_burn_patients.pdf |title=The use of hypnosis in the treatment of burn patients |journal=International Handbook of Clinical Hypnosis |vauthors=Ewin DM |year=2001 |volume=10 |issue=4 |pages=274–83 |pmid=1289964 |access-date=16 June 2013 |archive-date=5 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120705212147/http://bscw.rediris.es/pub/bscw.cgi/d4523306/Ewin-Use_hypnosis_treatment_burn_patients.pdf |url-status=dead}}</ref> The ''International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis'' found that hypnosis relieved the pain of 75% of 933 subjects participating in 27 different experiments.<ref name="Nash">Nash, Michael R. "[http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-truth-and-the-hype-of-2001-07 The Truth and the Hype of Hypnosis] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131101104111/http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=the-truth-and-the-hype-of-2001-07 |date=1 November 2013 }}". [[Scientific American]]: July 2001</ref> |
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Nicholas Spanos hypothesized that the behaviors associated with hypnosis are acted out knowingly by the person. He alleged that there are two reasons that cause people to misconstrue their state of consciousness as hypnosis. One of the reasons being that people believe that their behavior is caused by an external source instead of the self. The second is related to the way hypnotic rituals are performed. The hypnotist says certain things which are first interpreted as voluntary and then later on in the procedure as involuntary. An example being “relax the muscles in your legs” and then later “your legs feel limp and heavy.” |
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Hypnosis is effective in decreasing the fear of [[Treatment of cancer|cancer treatment]]<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/06/180619122514.htm|title=Hypnosis may help reduce fear of cancer treatment in children: Hypnosis could help to reduce the fear of medical procedures in children and young people with cancer.|work=ScienceDaily|access-date=22 June 2018|language=en|archive-date=17 April 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210417183052/https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/06/180619122514.htm|url-status=live}}</ref> reducing pain from<ref name="Butler">{{cite journal | vauthors = Butler B | title = The use of hypnosis in the care of the cancer patient | journal = Cancer | volume = 7 | issue = 1 | pages = 1–14 | date = January 1954 | pmid = 13126897 | doi = 10.1002/1097-0142(195401)7:1<1::AID-CNCR2820070103>3.0.CO;2-0 | doi-access = free}}</ref> and coping with cancer<ref>{{cite web |url=http://bscw.rediris.es/pub/bscw.cgi/d4431493/Peynovska-Efficacy_hypnotherapy_supplement_therapy_cancer.pdf |vauthors=Peynovska R, Fisher J, Oliver D, Matthew VM |year=2003 |title=Efficacy of hypnotherapy as a supplement therapy in cancer intervention |work=Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of The Royal College of Psychiatrists, 30 June – 3 July 2003 |access-date=5 May 2013 |archive-date=6 July 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120706012254/http://bscw.rediris.es/pub/bscw.cgi/d4431493/Peynovska-Efficacy_hypnotherapy_supplement_therapy_cancer.pdf |url-status=dead}}</ref> and other chronic conditions.<ref name="Nash"/> Nausea and other symptoms related to incurable diseases may also be managed with hypnosis.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Spiegel D, Moore R | title = Imagery and hypnosis in the treatment of cancer patients | journal = Oncology | volume = 11 | issue = 8 | pages = 1179–89; discussion 1189–95 | date = August 1997 | pmid = 9268979}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Mascott C | title = Hypnotherapy. A complementary therapy with broad applications | journal = Diabetes Self-Management | volume = 21 | issue = 5 | pages = 15–18 | year = 2004 | pmid = 15586907}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kwekkeboom KL, Gretarsdottir E | title = Systematic review of relaxation interventions for pain | journal = Journal of Nursing Scholarship | volume = 38 | issue = 3 | pages = 269–77 | year = 2006 | pmid = 17044345 | doi = 10.1111/j.1547-5069.2006.00113.x}}</ref> Some practitioners have claimed hypnosis might help boost the immune system of people with cancer. However, according to the [[American Cancer Society]], "available scientific evidence does not support the idea that hypnosis can influence the development or progression of cancer."<ref>{{cite web |
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Spanos’ findings were not to prove that the hypnotic state did not exist at all but to prove that the behaviors exhibited by those individuals are due to “highly motivated” individuals. (Hock R. R. (2005). Forty studies that changed psychology: explorations into history of psychological research. Upper Saddle River: Pearson.) |
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|url=http://www.cancer.org/treatment/treatmentsandsideeffects/complementaryandalternativemedicine/mindbodyandspirit/hypnosis |
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|title=Hypnosis |
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|date=November 2008 |
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|publisher=[[American Cancer Society]] |
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|access-date=22 September 2013 |
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|archive-date=31 July 2014 |
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|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140731144004/http://www.cancer.org/treatment/treatmentsandsideeffects/complementaryandalternativemedicine/mindbodyandspirit/hypnosis |
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|url-status=dead |
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}}</ref> |
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Hypnosis has been used as a pain relieving technique during [[dental surgery]],<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=WKYQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=N5UDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3232,32552|title=The Age - Google News Archive Search|website=news.google.com|access-date=11 July 2022|archive-date=13 June 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220613145427/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=WKYQAAAAIBAJ&sjid=N5UDAAAAIBAJ&pg=3232%2C32552|url-status=live}}</ref> and related pain management regimens as well. Researchers like Jerjes and his team have reported that hypnosis can help even those patients who have acute to severe orodental pain.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Jerjes W, Hopper C, Kumar M, Upile T, Madland G, Newman S, Feinmann C | title = Psychological intervention in acute dental pain: review | journal = British Dental Journal | volume = 202 | issue = 6 | pages = 337–43 | date = March 2007 | pmid = 17384613 | doi = 10.1038/bdj.2007.227 | doi-access = free}}</ref> Additionally, Meyerson and Uziel have suggested that hypnotic methods have been found to be highly fruitful for alleviating anxiety in patients with severe dental phobia.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Meyerson J, Uziel N | title = Application of hypno-dissociative strategies during dental treatment of patients with severe dental phobia | journal = The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | volume = 62 | issue = 2 | pages = 179–87 | pmid = 24568324 | doi = 10.1080/00207144.2014.869129 | year = 2014 | s2cid = 22065303}}</ref> |
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===Neuropsychological theory of hypnosis=== |
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Neuropsychological theories of hypnosis attempt to explain hypnotic phenomenon in terms of alterations in brain activity. Gruzelier, based on large amounts of EEG research, proposed that hypnosis is characterised by a shift in brain activity from anterior (front) to posterior (back). |
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For some psychologists who uphold the altered state theory of hypnosis, pain relief in response to hypnosis is said to be the result of the brain's [[Dual process theory|dual-processing]] functionality. This effect is obtained either through the process of selective attention or dissociation, in which both theories involve the presence of activity in pain receptive regions of the brain, and a difference in the processing of the stimuli by the hypnotised subject.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Myers |first1=David G. |title=Psychology: Tenth Edition in Modules |date=2014 |publisher=Worth Publishers |pages=112–13 |edition=10th}}</ref> |
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===Hypnosis as a conditioned process leading to sleep=== |
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<!-- (THIS IS ALSO RATHER DATED - IDEAS FROM BEHAVIOURISTIC PSYCHOLOGY HAVE BEEN SLOWLY REPLACED BY IDEAS FROM COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY) --> |
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Ivan Pavlov believed that hypnosis was a "partial sleep". He observed that the various degrees of hypnosis didn't significantly differ physiologically from the waking state and hypnosis depended on insignificant changes of environmental stimuli. Pavlov also suggested that lower brain stem mechanisms were involved in hypnotic conditioning.<ref>— Pavlov, I. P.: ''Experimental Psychology''. New York, Philosophical Library, 1957.</ref> |
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The American Psychological Association published a study comparing the effects of hypnosis, ordinary suggestion, and placebo in reducing pain. The study found that highly suggestible individuals experienced a greater reduction in pain from hypnosis compared with placebo, whereas less suggestible subjects experienced no pain reduction from hypnosis when compared with placebo. Ordinary non-hypnotic suggestion also caused reduction in pain compared to placebo, but was able to reduce pain in a wider range of subjects (both high and low suggestible) than hypnosis. The results showed that it is primarily the subject's responsiveness to suggestion, whether within the context of hypnosis or not, that is the main determinant of causing reduction in pain.<ref>"Hypnosis, suggestion, and placebo in the reduction of experimental pain" [http://www.faqs.org/abstracts/Psychology-and-mental-health/Hypnosis-suggestion-and-placebo-in-the-reduction-of-experimental-pain.html faqs.org] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091216090017/http://www.faqs.org/abstracts/Psychology-and-mental-health/Hypnosis-suggestion-and-placebo-in-the-reduction-of-experimental-pain.html |date=16 December 2009 }}</ref> |
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Some modern well-known hypnotherapists subscribe to this theory, since in hypnosis, the subject typically appears to be asleep because of eye closure that is typically part of the induction procedure. However, there is quite a bit of literature on blood pressure, reflexes, physiochemical and EEG studies which indicates that hypnosis more closely resembles complete wakefulness.{{citation needed}} |
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==== Other uses of hypnotherapy==== |
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===Hyper–suggestibility theory=== |
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<!-- (Kroger, 1977, p. 31) --> |
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Currently a more popular theory, it states the subject's attention is narrowed by certain techniques used by the hypnotist. As attention is narrowed, the hypnotist's words eventually take over the inner voice of the subject. From this theory comes the implication that only gullible or weak-minded people are suggestible. Some people, however, find the narrowing of attention to be desirable. [[Milton H. Erickson]] was said to have told his subjects, "... and my voice will go with you," meaning that Erickson's voice would be a comforting presence in the face of adversity and trouble. |
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In 2019, a Cochrane review was unable to find evidence of benefit of hypnosis in smoking cessation, and suggested if there is, it is small at best.<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Barnes|first1=Joanne|last2=McRobbie|first2=Hayden|last3=Dong|first3=Christine Y|last4=Walker|first4=Natalie|last5=Hartmann-Boyce|first5=Jamie|date=2019-06-14|editor-last=Cochrane Tobacco Addiction Group|title=Hypnotherapy for smoking cessation|journal=Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews|volume=2019|issue=6|pages=CD001008|language=en|doi=10.1002/14651858.CD001008.pub3|pmc=6568235|pmid=31198991}}</ref> |
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===Informational theory=== |
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<!-- (Kroger, 1977, p. 31 - THIS SOUNDS PSEUDO SCIENTIFIC) --> |
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This theory applies the concept of the brain-as-computer model. In electronic systems, a system adjusts its feedback networks to increase the signal-to-noise ratio for optimum functioning, called a "steady state". Increasing the receptability of a receptor enables messages to be more clearly received from a transmitter primarily by trying to reduce the interference (noise) as much as possible. Thus, the object of the hypnotist is to use techniques to reduce the interference and increase the receptability of specific messages (suggestions). |
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Hypnosis may be useful as an adjunct therapy for weight loss. A 1996 meta-analysis studying hypnosis combined with cognitive behavioural therapy found that people using both treatments lost more weight than people using cognitive behavioural therapy alone.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> |
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===A state of hysteria=== |
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<!--(IT IS IN THE HISTORY SECTION) --> |
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Charcot postulated that hypnosis was a symptom of [[hysteria]] and that only those people experiencing hysteria were believed to be hypnotizable.<ref>— Charcot, J. M.: ''Lectures on Diseases of the Nervous System''. London, New Sydenham Society, 1889.</ref> Although those exhibiting hysteria seem to be more suggestible, normal individuals are, indeed, hypnotizable which calls this theory into question. |
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American psychiatric nurses, in most medical facilities, are allowed to administer hypnosis to patients in order to relieve symptoms such as anxiety, arousal, negative behaviours, uncontrollable behaviour, and to improve self-esteem and confidence. This is permitted only when they have been completely trained about their clinical side effects and while under supervision when administering it.<ref>{{cite journal|doi=10.1016/S1078-3903(03)00226-X|author=Valente, M.S.|year=2003|title=Hypnosis: A Useful Strategy for Symptom Relief|journal=Journal of the American Psychiatric Nurses Association|volume= 9|issue=5|pages=163–66|s2cid=146512348}}</ref> |
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==Research on Hypnosis== |
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Much research has been conducted into the nature and effects of hypnosis and suggestion, and hypnosis continues to be a popular (if somewhat peripheral) tool in contemporary psychological research. A number of different strands of hypnosis research are apparent: that which examines the 'state' of hypnosis itself, that which examines the effects and properties of suggestions in and out of hypnosis, and that which uses hypnotic suggestion as a tool to research other areas of psychological functioning. |
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===Forensic hypnosis=== |
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With the advent of recent brain imaging techniques (MRI, although also EEG and PET) there has been a resurgence of interest in the relationship between hypnosis and brain function. Any human experience is reflected in some way in the brain—seeing colors or motion is underscored by activity in the visual cortex, feeling fear is mediated by activity in the amygdala—and so hypnosis and suggestion are expected to have observable effects upon brain function. An important issue for researchers conducting brain imaging is to separate the effects of hypnosis and suggestion—knowing that a suggestion given during hypnosis affects brain area X does not just tell us about hypnosis, it tells us about the effects of the suggestion too. To account for this, experiments need to include a non-hypnotic-response-to-suggestion condition—only this way can the specific effects of hypnosis be examined. |
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{{main|Forensic hypnosis}} |
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The use of hypnosis to exhume information thought to be buried within the mind in the investigative process and as evidence in court became increasingly popular from the 1950s to the early 1980s with its use being debated into the 1990s when its popular use mostly diminished.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Winter|first=Alison|date=2013-03-01|title=The rise and fall of forensic hypnosis|url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369848612001057|journal=Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences|series=Special Issue: Forensic Cultures|language=en|volume=44|issue=1|pages=26–35|doi=10.1016/j.shpsc.2012.09.011|pmid=23142619|issn=1369-8486|access-date=4 May 2023|archive-date=14 April 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190414222226/http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1369848612001057|url-status=live}}</ref> Forensic hypnosis's uses are hindered by concerns with its reliability and accuracy. Controversy surrounds the use of hypnotherapy to retrieve memories, especially those from early childhood. The [[American Medical Association]] and the [[American Psychological Association]] caution against [[recovered-memory therapy]] in cases of alleged childhood trauma, stating that "it is impossible, without corroborative evidence, to distinguish a true memory from a false one."<ref name="APA">{{cite web|url=http://www.apa.org/pubinfo/mem.html |title=Questions and Answers about Memories of Childhood Abuse |publisher=American Psychological Association |access-date=22 January 2007 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061205061916/http://apa.org/pubinfo/mem.html |archive-date=5 December 2006}}</ref> [[Past life regression]] is regarded as [[pseudoscience]].<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Astin JA, Shapiro SL, Eisenberg DM, Forys KL | title = Mind-body medicine: state of the science, implications for practice | journal = The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice | volume = 16 | issue = 2 | pages = 131–47 | year = 2003 | pmid = 12665179 | doi = 10.3122/jabfm.16.2.131 | citeseerx = 10.1.1.501.9041| s2cid = 2309771 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.medicine.virginia.edu/clinical/departments/psychiatry/sections/cspp/dops/dr.-stevensons-publications/STE40.pdf |title=Department of Psychiatry and Neurobehavioral Sciences – University of Virginia School of Medicine |publisher=Medicine.virginia.edu |access-date=20 September 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130615183751/http://www.medicine.virginia.edu/clinical/departments/psychiatry/sections/cspp/dops/dr.-stevensons-publications/STE40.pdf |archive-date=15 June 2013 |url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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=== Military === |
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A number of brain-imaging studies have been conducted which have used hypnosis, a selection are given below: |
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A 2006 [[declassification|declassified]] 1966 document obtained by the US [[Freedom of Information Act (United States)|Freedom of Information Act]] archive shows that hypnosis was investigated for military applications.<ref name="Hypnosis in Intelligence">[http://documents.theblackvault.com/documents/mindcontrol/hypnosisinintelligence.pdf Hypnosis in Intelligence] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100816155256/http://documents.theblackvault.com/documents/mindcontrol/hypnosisinintelligence.pdf |date=16 August 2010 }}, ''The Black Vault'', 2008</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=September 2021}} The full paper explores the potentials of operational uses.<ref name="Hypnosis in Intelligence"/> The overall conclusion of the study was that there was no evidence that hypnosis could be used for military applications, and no clear evidence whether "hypnosis" is a definable phenomenon outside ordinary suggestion, motivation, and subject expectancy. According to the document: |
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{{blockquote|text=The use of hypnosis in intelligence would present certain technical problems not encountered in the clinic or laboratory. To obtain compliance from a resistant source, for example, it would be necessary to hypnotise the source under essentially hostile circumstances. There is no good evidence, clinical or experimental, that this can be done.<ref name="Hypnosis in Intelligence"/>}} |
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For example, one controlled scientific experiment postulates that hypnosis may change conscious experience in a way not possible when people are not "hypnotized", at least in "highly hypnotizable" people. In this experiment, color perception was changed by hypnosis in "highly hypnotizable" people as determined by [[positron emission tomography]] (PET) scans (Kosslyn et al., 2000). (This research does not compare the effects of hypnosis on less hypnotizable people and could therefore show little causal effect due to the lack of a control group.) |
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Furthermore, the document states that: |
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Another research example, employing event-related [[Functional magnetic resonance imaging|fMRI]] and [[Electroencephalography|EEG]] coherence measures, compared certain specific neural activity "during [[Stroop effect|Stroop task]] performance between participants of low and high hypnotic susceptibility, at baseline and after hypnotic induction". According to its authors, "the fMRI data revealed that conflict-related [[Anterior cingulate cortex|ACC]] activity interacted with hypnosis and hypnotic susceptibility, in that highly susceptible participants displayed increased conflict-related neural activity in the hypnosis condition compared to baseline, as well as with respect to subjects with low susceptibility." (Egner et al., 2005). Skeptics dispute the significance of such findings, claiming that such changes cannot be shown to be particular to the hypnotized state, and that any other action such as daydreaming is also likely to alter brain activity in some manner. The subject is still a matter of current research and scientific debate. |
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{{blockquote|text=It would be difficult to find an area of scientific interest more beset by divided professional opinion and contradictory experimental evidence... No one can say whether hypnosis is a qualitatively unique state with some physiological and conditioned response components or only a form of suggestion induced by high motivation and a positive relationship between hypnotist and subject... [[Theodore X. Barber|T. X. Barber]] has produced "hypnotic deafness" and "hypnotic blindness", analgesia and other responses seen in hypnosis—all without hypnotising anyone... Orne has shown that unhypnotised persons can be motivated to equal and surpass the supposed superhuman physical feats seen in hypnosis.<ref name="Hypnosis in Intelligence"/>}} |
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There is a long tradition (over a century) of hypnosis research (the majority of which not using brain imaging techniques) which has allowed scientists to test key ideas in the debate. Hypnosis has been shown to be an effective tool for pain relief, and when combined adjunctively with other therapeutic techniques it has been demonstrated to be a powerful tool (it is effective for weight loss, IBS, anxiety conditions and many more—the data for smoking cessation are more dubious). |
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The study concluded that there are no reliable accounts of its effective use by an intelligence service in history.<ref name="Hypnosis in Intelligence"/> |
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'''Complex hybrid of social compliance''' |
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Research into hypnosis in military applications is further verified by the [[Project MKUltra]] experiments, also conducted by the [[CIA]].<ref>[http://community.theblackvault.com/articles/entry/CIA-MKULTRA-Collection- MKULTRA Program], ''The Black Vault'', 2008 {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120323173042/http://community.theblackvault.com/articles/entry/CIA-MKULTRA-Collection- |date=23 March 2012}}</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=September 2021}} According to Congressional testimony,<ref name="Congressional Hearing by MKULTRA">[http://www.theblackvault.com/documents/mindcontrol/hearing.pdf Congressional Hearing by MKULTRA] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080618041653/http://www.theblackvault.com/documents/mindcontrol/hearing.pdf |date=18 June 2008 }}, ''The Black Vault''</ref> the CIA experimented with utilising [[LSD]] and hypnosis for [[Brainwashing|mind control]]. Many of these programs were done domestically and on participants who were not informed of the study's purposes or that they would be given drugs.<ref name="Congressional Hearing by MKULTRA"/> |
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{{POV-section|Complex hybrid of social compliance - NPOV}} |
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=== Self-hypnosis === |
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Current research points to the conclusion that what we term hypnosis is in fact a complex hybrid of social compliance, relaxation, and suggestibility that can account for many esoteric behavioral manifestations. |
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{{Main|Self-hypnosis}} |
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Self-hypnosis happens when a person hypnotises oneself, commonly involving the use of [[autosuggestion]]. The technique is often used to increase motivation for a [[Dieting|diet]], to quit smoking, or to reduce stress. People who practise self-hypnosis sometimes require assistance; some people use devices known as [[mind machine]]s to assist in the process, whereas others use hypnotic recordings. |
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Self-hypnosis is claimed to help with stage fright, relaxation, and physical well-being.<ref>[http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/sdtu/research/programme/sdsh/index.php "Self-hypnosis as a skill for busy research workers."] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080513225502/http://www.ucl.ac.uk/hr/sdtu/research/programme/sdsh/index.php |date=13 May 2008 }} London's Global University Human Resources. ucl.ac.uk.</ref> |
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Psychologists such as [[Robert Baker]] claims that what we call hypnosis are actually a form of learned social behavior. |
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=== Stage hypnosis === |
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Some hypnotized subjects seem possessed, that is because possession involves a similar socio-cognitive context, a similar role-playing arrangement and rapport. Deep down, however, hypnotism, hysteria, and demonic possession share the common ground of being social constructs engineered mainly by enthusiastic therapists, showmen, and priests on the one side, and suggestible, imaginative, willing, fantasy-prone players with deep emotional needs or abilities on the other. |
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{{Main|Stage hypnosis}} |
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The hypnotist and subject learn what is expected of their roles and reinforce each other by their performances. The hypnotist provides the suggestions and the subject responds to the suggestions. The rest of the behavior—the hypnotist’s repetition of sounds or gestures, his soft, relaxing voice, etc., and the trance-like pose or sleep-like repose of the subject, etc.—are just window dressing, part of the drama that makes hypnosis seem mysterious. When one strips away these dramatic dressings what is left is something quite ordinary, even if extraordinarily useful: a self-induced, “psyched-up” state of suggestibility. |
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Stage hypnosis is a form of entertainment, traditionally employed in a club or theatre before an audience. Due to stage hypnotists' showmanship, many people believe that hypnosis is a form of mind control. Stage hypnotists typically attempt to hypnotise the entire audience and then select individuals who are "under" to come up on stage and perform embarrassing acts, while the audience watches. However, the effects of stage hypnosis are probably due to a combination of psychological factors, participant selection, suggestibility, physical manipulation, stagecraft, and trickery.<ref>{{cite book | last = Yapko | first = Michael | author-link = Michael D. Yapko | title = Trancework: An introduction to the practice of Clinical Hypnosis | location = New York | publisher = Brunner/Mazel | year = 1990 | page = 28}}</ref> The desire to be the centre of attention, having an excuse to violate their own fear suppressors, and the pressure to please are thought to convince subjects to "play along".<ref name="Wagstaff">{{cite book |last=Wagstaff |first=Graham F. | name-list-style = vanc |year=1981 |title=Hypnosis, Compliance and Belief |publisher=St. Martin's Press |location=New York |isbn=978-0-312-40157-3}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> Books by stage hypnotists sometimes explicitly describe the use of deception in their acts; for example, [[Ormond McGill]]'s ''New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism'' describes an entire "fake hypnosis" act that depends upon the use of private whispers throughout.{{citation needed|date=November 2020}} |
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=== Music === |
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==Hypnosis Methodologies and Effects== |
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The idea of music as hypnosis developed from the work of [[Franz Mesmer]]. Instruments such as pianos, violins, harps and, especially, [[Glass harmonica|the ''glass harmonica'']] often featured in Mesmer's treatments; and were considered to contribute to Mesmer's success.<ref>Polter 1934, p. 15. See also Franklin 1785, p. 23. Gallo and Finger 2000; Hadlock 2000a; Hyatt King 1945.</ref> |
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===General methods=== |
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The act of inducing a hypnotic state is referred to as an induction procedure. There is no current consensus on what the requirements are for an induction procedure to be effective; while some practitioners use simple calming verbal techniques, others use complex triggers, including mechanical devices.<ref>[http://hypnosistreatmentcenter.com/page45.html Michael Robinson's Self-Hypnosis Learning or Licensed Online Counseling, page 45)]</ref> |
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Hypnotic music became an important part in the development of a 'physiological psychology' that regarded the hypnotic state as an 'automatic' phenomenon that links to physical reflex. In their experiments with sound hypnosis, [[Jean-Martin Charcot]] used gongs and tuning forks, and [[Ivan Pavlov]] used bells. The intention behind their experiments was to prove that physiological response to sound could be automatic, bypassing the conscious mind.<ref>Pavlov 1928; Todes 2002.</ref> |
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Many experienced hypnotists claim that they can hypnotize almost anyone. They also claim it is a myth that people with strong will power cannot be hypnotized, as they claim these generally make the best participants. This is based on the idea that those who are most intelligent are also the most creative and as such they will make strong associations with the structure of language used by the hypnotist and by the visual or auditory representations inside of their mind. On the other hand, there is a common claim that no one can really be hypnotized against his or her will.<ref>[[Ambroise-Auguste Liébault|Liébault]], Le sommeil provoqué (Paris, 1889)</ref> The counter-claim given by many hypnotists is that while you cannot make someone do anything against their will, you can change what it is that they wish to do. |
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=== Satanic brainwashing === |
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Many religious and cultural rituals contain many similarities with techniques used for hypnotic induction and induce similar states in their participants. {{citation needed}} |
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In the 1980s and 1990s, [[satanic panic|a moral panic]] took place in the US fearing [[Satanic ritual abuse]]. As part of this, certain books such as ''The Devil's Disciples'' claimed that some bands, particularly in the musical genre of heavy metal, [[Brainwashing|brainwashed]] American teenagers with subliminal messages to lure them into the worship of the devil, sexual immorality, murder, and especially suicide.<ref>Godwin 1986, 1995; Peters and Peters 1985.</ref> |
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===General effects=== |
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====Focused attention==== |
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This school of thought holds that hypnosis as a state is very similar to other states of extreme concentration, where a person becomes oblivious to his or her surroundings while lost in thought. Often suggested as an example is when a driver suddenly finds himself much further down the road without any memory of driving the intervening distance ([[highway hypnosis]]), when a person is watching television and focuses so intently on the program that he ceases to be aware of the sides of the screen, or when a person is thinking on another subject while reading, then realizes that he has read several pages without consciously doing so or taking in any of the content. |
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=== Crime === |
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The act of hypnotizing, is, in effect, the act of manually inducing a similar state (''See, for example, general information on the [http://www.asch.net/genpubinfo.htm ASCH website]''). |
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Various people have been suspected of or convicted for hypnosis-related crimes, including robbery and sexual abuse. |
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In 1951, Palle Hardrup shot and killed two people during a botched robbery in [[Copenhagen]] - see [[Hypnosis murders]]. Hardrup claimed that his friend and former cellmate Bjørn Schouw Nielsen had hypnotised him to commit the robbery, inadvertently causing the deaths. Both were sentenced to jail time.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Martinsen |first1=Poul |title=Hypnosemorderen – dobbeltmennesket Palle Hardrup |date=2012 |publisher=Gyldendal |isbn=978-87-02-12200-8 |language=da}}</ref> |
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====Suggestibility==== |
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{{main|Suggestibility}} |
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[[Psychologists]] have produced controversial studies that seem to show a strong correlation between the ease of putting someone in a state of hypnosis and their level of [[suggestibility]]. Some of these studies have produced the [[Hypnotic susceptibility|Harvard scale]], [[Hypnotic susceptibility|Stanford scale]], and [[Hypnotic susceptibility|eye-roll test]]; all of which are supposed to predict how easily a person can be put in a hypnotized state. |
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In 2013, the then-40-year-old amateur hypnotist Timothy Porter attempted to sexually abuse his female weight-loss client. She reported awaking from a trance and finding him behind her with his pants down, telling her to touch herself. He was subsequently called to court and included on the sex offender list.<ref>[https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/hypnotist-timothy-porter-made-sex-2234728 Evil hypnotist made me into his sex slave: He admits vile acts while client was in trance] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171107023322/http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/hypnotist-timothy-porter-made-sex-2234728 |date=7 November 2017 }}, ''Mirror''</ref> In 2015, Gary Naraido, then 52, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for several hypnosis-related sexual abuse charges. Besides the primary charge by a 22-year-old woman who he sexually abused in a hotel under the guise of a free therapy session, he also admitted to having sexually assaulted a 14-year-old girl.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/11897562/Hypnotist-jailed-for-ten-years-after-sexually-assaulting-woman-under-his-spell.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220111/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/11897562/Hypnotist-jailed-for-ten-years-after-sexually-assaulting-woman-under-his-spell.html |archive-date=11 January 2022 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Hypnotist jailed for ten years after sexually assaulting woman under his spell|journal=Daily Telegraph|last=Clarke-Billings|first=Lucy| name-list-style = vanc |date=28 September 2015|access-date=1 November 2017|language=en-GB|issn=0307-1235}}{{cbignore}}</ref> In December 2018, a Brazilian [[mediumship|medium]] named [[João Teixeira de Faria]] (also known as "João de Deus"), famous for performing Spiritual Surgeries through hypnosis techniques, was accused of sexual abuse by 12 women.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/11/world/americas/brazil-healer-john-of-god.html |archive-url=https://ghostarchive.org/archive/20220103/https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/11/world/americas/brazil-healer-john-of-god.html |archive-date=2022-01-03 |url-access=subscription |url-status=live|title=Celebrity Healer in Brazil Is Accused of Sexually Abusing Followers|last=Darlington|first=Shasta| name-list-style = vanc |date=11 December 2018|work=The New York Times|access-date=12 December 2018|language=en-US|issn=0362-4331}}{{cbignore}}</ref><ref>{{cite web| url=https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/en/brazil/2018/12/twelve-women-accuse-medium-john-of-god-of-sexual-abuse.shtml| title=Twelve Women Accuse Medium John of God of Sexual Abuse| date=9 December 2018| access-date=14 December 2018| archive-date=11 December 2018| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181211065435/https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/internacional/en/brazil/2018/12/twelve-women-accuse-medium-john-of-god-of-sexual-abuse.shtml| url-status=live}}</ref> In 2016 an Ohio lawyer was sentenced to 12 years of prison after hypnotizing a dozen different clients into committing sexual acts under the guise of a mindfulness exercise.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=https://time.com/4571750/ohio-lawyer-hynotize-women/|title=Lawyer Who Hypnotized Women For His Own Sexual Pleasure Sentenced to Prison|magazine=Time|language=en|access-date=30 December 2019}}</ref> |
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Hypnosis has further been described as "The suspension of the critical factor" which expands on the idea of "increased suggestibility". A person who claims to be hypnotized may accept statements as true that he or she would normally reject. |
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=== Sexual === |
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For example, when told "you have forgotten your name," the subject in a normal state would react with disbelief, but under hypnosis people have claimed that they have, indeed, forgotten their own names. |
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{{Further|Erotic hypnosis}} |
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== State vs. nonstate == |
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It often appears as if the hypnotized participant accepts the authority of the hypnotist over his or her own experience. When asked after the conclusion of such a session, some participants appear to be genuinely unable to recall the incident, while others say that they had known the hypnotist was wrong but at the time it had seemed easier just to go along with his instructions. ([[Richard Feynman]] describes this in his memoir ''[[Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!]]'' as his own experience under hypnosis.) The mechanism of this effect is however disputed: Some hypnotists would claim that this showed the difference between a deep and a shallow hypnotic [[altered state of consciousness|trance]], while skeptics would question the validity of this conclusion, citing that such effects can be duplicated in other circumstances where an agent holds authority, such as the [[Milgram experiment]], and suggest that unreliability in results discredits a scientific theory of hypnosis. |
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The central theoretical disagreement regarding hypnosis is known as the "state versus nonstate" debate. When Braid introduced the concept of hypnotism, he equivocated over the nature of the "state", sometimes describing it as a specific sleep-like neurological state comparable to animal hibernation or yogic meditation, while at other times he emphasised that hypnotism encompasses a number of different stages or states that are an extension of ordinary psychological and physiological processes. Overall, Braid appears to have moved from a more "special state" understanding of hypnotism toward a more complex "nonstate" orientation.{{citation needed|date=September 2014}} |
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State theorists interpret the effects of hypnotism as due primarily to a specific, abnormal, and uniform psychological or physiological state of some description, often referred to as "hypnotic trance" or an "altered state of consciousness". Nonstate theorists rejected the idea of hypnotic trance and interpret the effects of hypnotism as due to a combination of multiple task-specific factors derived from normal cognitive, behavioural, and social psychology, such as social role-perception and favorable motivation ([[Theodore R. Sarbin|Sarbin]]), active imagination and positive cognitive set ([[Theodore X. Barber|Barber]]), response expectancy (Kirsch), and the active use of task-specific subjective strategies ([[Nicholas Spanos|Spanos]]). The personality psychologist Robert White is often cited as providing one of the first nonstate definitions of hypnosis in a 1941 article: |
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====Judgment==== |
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Some believe that hypnosis can affect the subject's judgment and therefore could potentially cause them harm. In the hand of a "professional" seeking to promote the subject's welfare, those of this opinion believe, hypnosis can produce profound effects and be a complement to treatment. Some of those who believe in hypnosis believe that in most cases one can resist hypnosis if one is aware of it. However, some of those who hold this belief also believe in [[brainwashing]] and/or [[mind control]] and believe that when hypnotism takes place in the context of these, resisting hypnosis is far more difficult. These beliefs are not generally based on scientific evidence, as there is no scientific consensus on whether mind control even exists, let alone whether it is more difficult to resist hypnotism in the context of this unverified theoretical construct. |
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{{blockquote|text= |
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====Abreaction==== |
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Hypnotic behaviour is meaningful, goal-directed striving, its most general goal being to behave like a hypnotised person as this is continuously defined by the operator and understood by the client.<ref>{{cite journal|author=White, R.W.|title=A preface to the theory of hypnotism|journal= Journal of Abnormal Psychology|volume=36|pages= 477–505|year= 1941|doi=10.1037/h0053844|issue=4}}</ref> |
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Some psychologists and other mental health professionals are concerned that practitioners of hypnosis might evoke intense emotions in their clients that they are untrained to handle. These [[abreact|abreaction]]s might occur when spontaneously or purposefully recalling traumatic events or, some believe, spontaneous mental breakdowns. |
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}} |
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Put simply, it is often claimed that, whereas the older "special state" interpretation emphasises the difference between hypnosis and ordinary psychological processes, the "nonstate" interpretation emphasises their similarity. |
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==Hypnosis applications== |
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===Hypnotherapy=== |
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{{main|Hypnotherapy}} |
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[[Hypnotherapy]] is a term to describe the use of hypnosis in a therapeutic context. Many hypnotherapists refer to their practice as "clinical work." Hypnotherapy can either be used as an addition to the work of licensed physicians or psychologists, or it can be used in a stand-alone environment where the hypnotherapist in question usually owns his or her own business. The majority of certified hypnotherapists (C.Hts in the US, Diploma. Hyp in the UK) today earn a large portion of their money through the cessation of smoking (often in a single session) and the aid of weight loss (body sculpting). Some of the so called 'incurable' diseases have shown to be treatable with the mind-body (such as cancer, diabetes, and arthritis).{{citation needed}} Some of the treatments practiced by hypnotherapists, in particular so-called [[past life regression|regression]], have been viewed with skepticism. |
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Comparisons between hypnotised and non-hypnotised subjects suggest that, if a "hypnotic trance" does exist, it only accounts for a small proportion of the effects attributed to hypnotic suggestion, most of which can be replicated without hypnotic induction.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Hasegawa |first1=Harutomo |last2=Jamieson |first2=Graham A. |date=September 2002 |title=Conceptual issues in hypnosis research: explanations, definitions and the state/non-state debate |url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ch.247 |journal=Contemporary Hypnosis |language=en |volume=19 |issue=3 |pages=103–117 |doi=10.1002/ch.247 |issn=0960-5290 |access-date=11 January 2023 |archive-date=11 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230111191759/https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ch.247 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Theories of Hypnosis {{!}} Hypnosis And Suggestion |url=https://hypnosisandsuggestion.org/theories-of-hypnosis.html |access-date=2022-06-24 |website=hypnosisandsuggestion.org |archive-date=18 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220618145423/https://hypnosisandsuggestion.org//theories-of-hypnosis.html |url-status=live }}</ref>{{self-published inline|date=June 2022}} |
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The [[American Medical Association]] and the [[American Psychological Association]] have both cautioned against the use of repressed memory therapy in dealing with cases of alleged childhood trauma, stating that "it is impossible, without other corroborative evidence, to distinguish a true memory from a false one"[http://www.apa.org/pubinfo/mem.html], and so the procedure is "fraught with problems of potential misapplication"[http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~gallaghr/ama.html]. (See also [[false memory]]). This is why Forensic Hypnosis is not widely used in many countries' legal systems. |
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=== Hyper-suggestibility === |
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===Clinical hypnosis=== |
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Braid can be taken to imply, in later writings, that hypnosis is largely a state of heightened suggestibility induced by expectation and focused attention. In particular, [[Hippolyte Bernheim]] became known as the leading proponent of the "suggestion theory" of hypnosis, at one point going so far as to declare that there is no hypnotic state, only heightened suggestibility. There is a general consensus that heightened suggestibility is an essential characteristic of hypnosis. In 1933, [[Clark L. Hull]] wrote: |
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{{blockquote|text= If a subject after submitting to the hypnotic procedure shows no genuine increase in susceptibility to any suggestions whatever, there seems no point in calling him hypnotised, regardless of how fully and readily he may respond to suggestions of lid-closure and other superficial sleeping behaviour.<ref>{{cite book|author=Clark Leonard Hull|title=Hypnosis and suggestibility: an experimental approach|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CknOAAAAMAAJ|access-date=30 October 2011|year=1933|publisher=D. Appleton-Century company|page=392|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163810/https://books.google.com/books?id=CknOAAAAMAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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The [[American Society of Clinical Hypnosis]] is an organization that "promotes greater acceptance of hypnosis as a clinical tool with broad applications". Hypnosis is applied to a great range of both physical and psychological ailments, rather than being restricted to purely psychological phenomena. The society was founded by [[Milton Erickson]], a doctor who attempted to put hypnosis on a firm therapeutic backing in the [[1950]]s. |
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}} |
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=== Conditioned inhibition === |
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Milton H. Erickson was opposed to non-board-licensed healthcare professionals performing therapeutic hypnotism, which has since caused difficulty for certified laymen willing to practice. In the United States, certified lay hypnotists are now said to perform "non-therapeutic issue-resolution hypnotism", rather than "hypnotherapy". [http://www.ngh.net/CodeEthicsStandards.pdf] |
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[[Ivan Pavlov]] stated that hypnotic suggestion provided the best example of a conditioned reflex response in human beings; i.e., that responses to suggestions were learned associations triggered by the words used: |
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{{blockquote|text=Speech, on account of the whole preceding life of the adult, is connected up with all the internal and external stimuli which can reach the cortex, signaling all of them and replacing all of them, and therefore it can call forth all those reactions of the organism which are normally determined by the actual stimuli themselves. We can, therefore, regard "suggestion" as the most simple form of a typical reflex in man.<ref>Pavlov, quoted in Salter, ''What is Hypnosis''?, 1944: 23</ref>}} |
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Recently, there are reports that efforts to reduce obesity with hypnosis (when used in combination with cognitive behavioral therapy, exercise, and a low-fat diet) may be effective. [http://www.umm.edu/altmed/ConsConditions/Obesitycc.html]. |
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He also believed that hypnosis was a "partial sleep", meaning that a generalised inhibition of cortical functioning could be encouraged to spread throughout regions of the brain. He observed that the various degrees of hypnosis did not significantly differ physiologically from the waking state and hypnosis depended on insignificant changes of environmental stimuli. Pavlov also suggested that lower-brain-stem mechanisms were involved in hypnotic conditioning.<ref name="Pavlov">{{cite book | vauthors = Pavlov IP |title=''Experimental Psychology'' |location=New York |publisher=Philosophical Library |year=1957}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Barker W, Burgwin S | title = Brain wave patterns accompanying changes in sleep and wakefulness during hypnosis | journal = Psychosomatic Medicine | volume = 10 | issue = 6 | pages = 317–26 | year = 1948 | pmid = 18106841 | doi = 10.1097/00006842-194811000-00002 | s2cid = 31249127 }}</ref> |
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Milton Erickson's technique of hypnosis was later called the Ericksonian technique |
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Pavlov's ideas combined with those of his rival [[Vladimir Bekhterev]] and became the basis of hypnotic psychotherapy in the Soviet Union, as documented in the writings of his follower K.I. Platonov. Soviet theories of hypnotism subsequently influenced the writings of Western behaviourally oriented hypnotherapists such as [[Andrew Salter (psychologist)|Andrew Salter]]. |
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===Self-hypnosis=== |
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{{main|Autosuggestion}} |
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Self-hypnosis (or [[autosuggestion]]) hypnosis in which a person hypnotizes himself or herself without the assistance of another person to serve as the hypnotist—is a staple of hypnotherapy-related [[self-help]] programs. It is most often used to help the self-hypnotist stay on a [[Dieting|diet]], overcome [[cigarette|smoking]] or some other [[addiction]], or to generally boost the hypnotized person's [[self-esteem]]. It is rarely used for the more complex or [[controversy|controversial]] uses of hypnotism, which require the hypnotist to monitor the hypnotized person's reactions and responses and respond accordingly. Most people who practice self-hypnosis require a focus in order to become fully hypnotized; there are many [[computer program]]s on the market that can ostensibly help in this area, though few, if any, have been scientifically proven to aid self-hypnosis. |
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=== Neuropsychology === |
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Some people use devices known as mind machines to help them go into self-hypnosis more readily. A mind machine consists of glasses with different colored flashing LEDs on the inside, and headphones. The LEDs stimulate the visual channel while the headphones stimulate the audio channel with similar or slightly different frequencies designed to produce a certain mental state. A common occurrence is the use of binaural beats in the audio which is said to produce hypnosis more readily. |
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Changes in brain activity have been found in some studies of highly responsive hypnotic subjects. These changes vary depending upon the type of suggestions being given.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Raz A, Fan J, Posner MI | title = Hypnotic suggestion reduces conflict in the human brain | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | volume = 102 | issue = 28 | pages = 9978–83 | date = July 2005 | pmid = 15994228 | pmc = 1174993 | doi = 10.1073/pnas.0503064102 | bibcode = 2005PNAS..102.9978R| doi-access = free }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Derbyshire SW, Whalley MG, Stenger VA, Oakley DA | title = Cerebral activation during hypnotically induced and imagined pain | journal = NeuroImage | volume = 23 | issue = 1 | pages = 392–401 | date = September 2004 | pmid = 15325387 | doi = 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.04.033 | s2cid = 16786564}}</ref> The state of light to medium hypnosis, where the body undergoes physical and mental relaxation, is associated with a pattern mostly of alpha waves.<ref>London College of Clinical Hypnosis. "What is Clinical Hypnosis?" [https://web.archive.org/web/20051101055303/http://www.lcch.co.uk/hypnotherapy.htm] . Accessed 14 September 2013</ref>{{Better source needed|date=September 2021}} However, what these results indicate is unclear. They may indicate that suggestions genuinely produce changes in perception or experience that are not simply a result of imagination. However, in normal circumstances without hypnosis, the brain regions associated with motion detection are activated both when motion is seen and when motion is imagined, without any changes in the subjects' perception or experience.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Grossman ED, Blake R | title = Brain activity evoked by inverted and imagined biological motion | journal = Vision Research | volume = 41 | issue = 10–11 | pages = 1475–82 | year = 2001 | pmid = 11322987 | doi = 10.1016/S0042-6989(00)00317-5 | s2cid = 6078493| doi-access = free }}</ref> This may therefore indicate that highly suggestible hypnotic subjects are simply activating to a greater extent the areas of the brain used in imagination, without real perceptual changes. It is, however, premature to claim that hypnosis and meditation are mediated by similar brain systems and neural mechanisms.<ref>[http://mbr.synergiesprairies.ca/mbr/index.php/mbr/article/view/515 Functional neuroimaging studies of hypnosis and meditation: A comparative perspective] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121008034039/http://mbr.synergiesprairies.ca/mbr/index.php/mbr/article/view/515 |date=8 October 2012}}</ref> |
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Another study has demonstrated that a colour hallucination suggestion given to subjects in hypnosis activated colour-processing regions of the occipital cortex.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Kosslyn SM, Thompson WL, Costantini-Ferrando MF, Alpert NM, Spiegel D | title = Hypnotic visual illusion alters color processing in the brain | journal = The American Journal of Psychiatry | volume = 157 | issue = 8 | pages = 1279–84 | date = August 2000 | pmid = 10910791 | doi = 10.1176/appi.ajp.157.8.1279 | s2cid = 18060042 }}</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=September 2021}} A 2004 review of research examining the [[EEG]] laboratory work in this area concludes: |
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===Dental application=== |
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{{blockquote|Hypnosis is not a unitary state and therefore should show different patterns of EEG activity depending upon the task being experienced. In our evaluation of the literature, enhanced [[theta wave|theta]] is observed during hypnosis when there is task performance or concentrative hypnosis, but not when the highly hypnotizable individuals are passively relaxed, somewhat sleepy and/or more diffuse in their attention.<ref>{{cite book|author=Horton |title=The Highly Hypnotisable Subject|date=2004|page=140 |author2= Crawford}}</ref>}} |
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The use of hypnosis in dentistry has a long history. Dealing with [[hypnodontia]]—the use of hypnosis in dentistry—has attested to the increasing sophistication of hypnotic procedures to deal with the special problems of the dental patient. Besides smoothing out dental procedures by way of its generalized anti-anxiety effects, it can increase overall patient comfort, make the dental experience acceptable and bearable, decrease resistance to future intervention, and through posthypnotic suggestions, encourage more rapid recovery. |
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Studies have shown an association of hypnosis with stronger theta-frequency activity as well as with changes to the [[gamma wave|gamma]]-frequency activity.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Jensen MP, Adachi T, Hakimian S | title = Brain Oscillations, Hypnosis, and Hypnotizability | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 57 | issue = 3 | pages = 230–53 | date = January 2015 | pmid = 25792761 | pmc = 4361031 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.2014.976786 | type = Review}}</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=September 2021}} [[Neuroimaging]] techniques have been used to investigate neural correlates of hypnosis.<ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Mazzoni G, Venneri A, McGeown WJ, Kirsch I | title = Neuroimaging resolution of the altered state hypothesis | journal = Cortex; A Journal Devoted to the Study of the Nervous System and Behavior | volume = 49 | issue = 2 | pages = 400–10 | date = February 2013 | pmid = 23026758 | doi = 10.1016/j.cortex.2012.08.005 | s2cid = 206984627 | url = https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/44493/ | type = Review | access-date = 21 July 2021 | archive-date = 14 June 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20210614142638/https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/44493/ | url-status = live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Landry M, Raz A | title = Hypnosis and imaging of the living human brain | journal = The American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis | volume = 57 | issue = 3 | pages = 285–313 | date = January 2015 | pmid = 25928680 | doi = 10.1080/00029157.2014.978496 | s2cid = 844244 | type = Review}}</ref> |
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===Obstetric application (painless childbirth)=== |
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The induction phase of hypnosis may also affect the activity in brain regions that control [[intention]] and process [[Emotional conflict|conflict]]. Anna Gosline claims: |
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The practice of hypnotically assisted deliveries has a history of over a century. Falling into disfavor due to competition from chemical anesthesia, hypnosis has seen a revival in the last two decades. One important reason for this comeback is the realization that hypnosis may find usefulness not only in obstetric analgesia or anesthesia, but also in all phases of giving birth from pregnancy to postpartum recovery. |
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{{blockquote|Gruzelier and his colleagues studied brain activity using an [[fMRI]] while subjects completed a standard cognitive exercise, called the [[Stroop task]]. The team screened subjects before the study and chose 12 that were highly susceptible to hypnosis and 12 with low susceptibility. They all completed the task in the fMRI under normal conditions and then again under hypnosis. Throughout the study, both groups were consistent in their task results, achieving similar scores regardless of their mental state. During their first task session, before hypnosis, there were no significant differences in brain activity between the groups. But under hypnosis, Gruzelier found that the highly susceptible subjects showed significantly more brain activity in the [[anterior cingulate gyrus]] than the weakly susceptible subjects. This area of the brain has been shown to respond to errors and evaluate emotional outcomes. The highly susceptible group also showed much greater brain activity on the left side of the [[prefrontal cortex]] than the weakly susceptible group. This is an area involved with higher level cognitive processing and behaviour.<ref>{{cite magazine|last=Gosline|first=Anna| name-list-style = vanc |magazine=New Scientist|url=https://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6385|date=10 September 2004|title=Hypnosis really changes your mind|access-date=2007-08-27}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | vauthors = Egner T, Jamieson G, Gruzelier J | title = Hypnosis decouples cognitive control from conflict monitoring processes of the frontal lobe | journal = NeuroImage | volume = 27 | issue = 4 | pages = 969–78 | date = October 2005 | pmid = 15964211 | doi = 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2005.05.002 | s2cid = 13979703}}</ref>}} |
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===Forensic application=== |
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Scientific knowledge of hypnosis applied to Legal problems is called forensic hypnosis. Courts prior to 1968 consistently excluded post-hypnotic testimony on the grounds that it was unreliable and apt to influence a jury unduly. Now hypnosis practice is growing stronger and still admissible in courtroom testimonies as long as the stringent criteria and guidelines are met. American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code specifies Crime done by hypnotic Suggestion & Witness evidence in court after Hypnotic suggestion are not valued. In the U.S., [[Oregon]], [[Texas]], [[Indiana]], [[Nevada]], and [[California]] states have separate hypnotic investigation acts. Nevada courts accept hypnotically refreshed statements as evidence for judgment. [[Russia]] generally uses hypnosis in criminal investigations. |
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=== |
=== Dissociation === |
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Pierre Janet originally developed the idea of ''dissociation of consciousness'' from his work with hysterical patients. He believed that hypnosis was an example of dissociation, whereby areas of an individual's behavioural control separate from ordinary awareness. Hypnosis would remove some control from the conscious mind, and the individual would respond with autonomic, reflexive behaviour. Weitzenhoffer describes hypnosis via this theory as "dissociation of awareness from the majority of sensory and even strictly neural events taking place."<ref name="Weitzenhoffer, 2000">{{cite book | vauthors = Weitzenhoffer AM |title=''Hypnotism – An Objective Study in Suggestibility'' |location=New York |publisher=Wiley |year=1953 |isbn=978-1-258-02536-6}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref> |
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Influencing the crowds of common longings and yearnings by a demagogue is called mass hypnosis. Generally mass hypnosis is applied to religious sessions. Many forms of music and dance can be used to create religious trance. |
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=== Neodissociation === |
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[[Ernest Hilgard]], who developed the "neodissociation" theory of hypnotism, hypothesised that hypnosis causes the subjects to divide their consciousness voluntarily. One part responds to the hypnotist while the other retains awareness of reality. Hilgard made subjects take an ice water bath. None mentioned the water being cold or feeling pain. Hilgard then asked the subjects to lift their index finger if they felt pain and 70% of the subjects lifted their index finger. This showed that, even though the subjects were listening to the suggestive hypnotist, they still sensed the water's temperature.<ref>{{cite book | last1=McEntarffer | first1=Robert | last2=Weseley | first2=Allyson | title=Barron's AP Psychology 2008 | publisher=Barron's Educational Series, Inc | publication-place=Hauppauge, N.Y. | date=2007 | isbn=978-0-7641-3665-8 | oclc=73742844 }}</ref> |
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In stage hypnosis, a hypnotist carefully chooses volunteers from the audience, puts them into a trance using hypnosis and then plants suggestions for them to perform. The critical factor in all stage hypnosis shows is the choice of enthusiastic and credulous individuals. Various techniques exist for discerning whether an individual is a likely candidate for a hypnosis stage act. Often, the sheer willingness of audience members to volunteer is a sign that they will "go along with" the hypnotist's suggestions during the show, whether or not they ever really become hypnotised in the first place. For example, the volunteers may be made to believe they are drunk, aliens speaking a strange alien language, naked or seeing others naked, 6-year-old children, ballet dancers etc. Such suggestions are designed to be temporary, lasting the duration of the show. Stage hypnosis is a unique performance in that it involves "real" people from the audience responding in a variety of ways, making no two shows the same. There has been debate over the years as to whether some degree of fraud or collusion may be involved in some stage hypnosis acts. |
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=== Social role-taking theory === |
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Regarding the phenomenon of stage hypnotism, Jon Connelly, Ph.D., a therapeutic hypnotist, writes: |
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The main theorist who pioneered the influential role-taking theory of hypnotism was [[Theodore R. Sarbin|Theodore Sarbin]]. Sarbin argued that hypnotic responses were motivated attempts to fulfill the socially constructed roles of hypnotic subjects. This has led to the misconception that hypnotic subjects are simply "faking". However, Sarbin emphasised the difference between faking, in which there is little subjective identification with the role in question, and role-taking, in which the subject not only acts externally in accord with the role but also subjectively identifies with it to some degree, acting, thinking, and feeling "as if" they are hypnotised. Sarbin drew analogies between role-taking in hypnosis and role-taking in other areas such as [[method acting]], mental illness, and shamanic possession, etc. This interpretation of hypnosis is particularly relevant to understanding stage hypnosis, in which there is clearly strong peer pressure to comply with a socially constructed role by performing accordingly on a theatrical stage. |
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Hence, the ''social constructionism and role-taking theory'' of hypnosis suggests that individuals are enacting (as opposed to merely ''playing'') a role and that really there is no such thing as a hypnotic trance. A socially constructed relationship is built depending on how much [[rapport]] has been established between the "hypnotist" and the subject (see [[Hawthorne effect]], [[Pygmalion effect]], and [[placebo effect]]). |
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:''How does the stage hypnotist create the illusion of "taking over" his subject's minds? It appears they are helpless to refuse whatever he directs them to do under his power and control.'' |
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Psychologists such as [[Robert A. Baker|Robert Baker]] and Graham Wagstaff claim that what we call hypnosis is actually a form of learned social behaviour, a complex hybrid of social compliance, relaxation, and suggestibility that can account for many esoteric behavioural manifestations.<ref name="Baker, 1990">{{cite book |last=Baker |first=Robert A. | name-list-style = vanc |year=1990 |title=''They Call It Hypnosis'' |url=https://archive.org/details/theycallithypnos0000bake |url-access=registration |publisher=Prometheus Books |location=Buffalo, NY |isbn=978-0-87975-576-8}}{{Page needed|date=September 2010}}</ref>{{Primary source inline|date=September 2021}} |
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:''How is this accomplished? It begins with the hypnotist asking for volunteers from an audience already entranced enough with the idea of stage hypnosis that they chose to make attending the show their priority. Naturally, they all have expectations about what they will witness.'' |
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=== Cognitive-behavioural theory === |
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:''The audience is made up of three categories of attendees. The first is prepared, and actually hoping to come up on stage to be subjects despite knowing they will be doing silly things in front of everyone else. The second category is comprised of those who want to prove they can't be hypnotized. These folks are likely to volunteer but only to prove the hypnotist wrong. Finally, the third group is simply interested in watching the show.'' |
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Barber, Spanos, and Chaves (1974) proposed a nonstate "cognitive-behavioural" theory of hypnosis, similar in some respects to Sarbin's social role-taking theory and building upon the earlier research of Barber. On this model, hypnosis is explained as an extension of ordinary psychological processes like imagination, relaxation, expectation, social compliance, etc. In particular, Barber argued that responses to hypnotic suggestions were mediated by a "positive cognitive set" consisting of positive expectations, attitudes, and motivation. Daniel Araoz subsequently coined the acronym "TEAM" to symbolise the subject's orientation to hypnosis in terms of "trust", "expectation", "attitude", and "motivation".<ref name="Barber, Spanos 1974"/>{{Primary source inline|date=September 2021}} |
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Barber et al. noted that similar factors appeared to mediate the response both to hypnotism and to cognitive behavioural therapy, in particular systematic desensitisation.<ref name="Barber, Spanos 1974"/> Hence, research and clinical practice inspired by their interpretation has led to growing interest in the relationship between hypnotherapy and cognitive behavioural therapy.<ref name="Chapman">{{cite book|author=Robin A. Chapman|title=The clinical use of hypnosis in cognitive behavior therapy: a practitioner's casebook|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=u6UpFP2fIqcC|access-date=30 October 2011|year=2006|publisher=Springer Publishing Company|isbn=978-0-8261-2884-3|archive-date=2 July 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230702163307/https://books.google.com/books?id=u6UpFP2fIqcC|url-status=live}}</ref>{{rp|105}}<ref name="Bolocofsky"/> |
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:''The first thing the hypnotist does is to ask for volunteers. On the crowded stage, he "tests" their willingness to cooperate by directing them to do something and he observes their reactions. Anyone not cooperating is eliminated. Seeing others dismissed, enhances the willingness of the remaining volunteers to cooperate even more fully.'' |
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=== Information theory === |
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:''The task of finding the most cooperative and dramatic volunteers is accomplished as the hypnotist asks those on stage to do even stranger things and eliminates those whose performance isn't up to par. Soon a small number of volunteers remain. These people are willing to dramatically engage in almost anything the hypnotist suggests. The audience has enjoyed the screening process on another level, believing the hypnotist has caused the subjects to become more and more entranced with hypnosis.'' |
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An approach loosely based on [[information theory]] uses a brain-as-computer model. In adaptive systems, [[feedback]] increases the [[signal-to-noise ratio]], which may converge towards a steady state. Increasing the signal-to-noise ratio enables messages to be more clearly received. The hypnotist's object is to use techniques to reduce interference and increase the receptability of specific messages (suggestions).<ref>Kroger, William S. (1977) ''Clinical and experimental hypnosis in medicine, dentistry, and psychology.'' Lippincott, Philadelphia, p. 31. {{ISBN|0-397-50377-6}}</ref> |
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=== Systems theory === |
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:''The hypnotist tells the small group of remaining subjects to relax even more into the role of "hypnotized person" he created for them. There is little difference between a good hypnotic subject and a good actor. The context and the understanding each has of why they are doing what they are doing, is the main difference. They both voluntarily throw themselves into the role created for them since both are stage performers.'' |
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[[Systems theory]], in this context, may be regarded as an extension of Braid's original conceptualisation of hypnosis as involving "the brain and nervous system generally".<ref name=br>{{cite book|author=Braid J|title=Neurypnology or The rationale of nervous sleep considered in relation with animal magnetism.|location=Buffalo, NY|publisher=John Churchill|year=1843}}</ref>{{rp|page=31}} Systems theory considers the [[nervous system]]'s organisation into interacting subsystems. Hypnotic phenomena thus involve not only increased or decreased activity of particular subsystems, but also their interaction. A central phenomenon in this regard is that of feedback loops, which suggest a mechanism for creating hypnotic phenomena.<ref name="Morgan, 1993">{{cite book|author=Morgan J.D.|title=The Principles of Hypnotherapy|publisher=Eildon Press|year=1993}}</ref> |
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=== Societies === |
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:''The stage hypnotist is like a casting director for a movie. The casting director selects people who can vividly imagine and act on what is written in the script as if it was real. These are the same qualities that would make someone a good hypnotic subject. Both the hypnotist and the film director create the scene and encourage the subject or actor into imagining their role to the extent that it can become real to them. They are often described as "absorbed" in the role. Actors know their job is to fool the audience into experiencing the role as real also. The hypnosis subject imagines her role so vividly, it is experienced as real. On some level, both the actor and the hypnotized subject know what is happening. Neither is being "controlled."'' |
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{{Unreferenced section|date=September 2021}} |
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There is a huge range of societies in England who train individuals in hypnosis; however, one of the longest-standing organisations is the British Society of Clinical and Academic Hypnosis (BSCAH). It origins date back to 1952 when a group of dentists set up the 'British Society of Dental Hypnosis'. Shortly after, a group of sympathetic medical practitioners merged with this fast-evolving organisation to form 'The Dental and Medical Society for the Study of Hypnosis'; and, in 1968, after various statutory amendments had taken place, the 'British Society of Medical and Dental Hypnosis' (BSMDH) was formed. This society always had close links with the [[Royal Society of Medicine]] and many of its members were involved in setting up a hypnosis section at this centre of medical research in London. And, in 1978, under the presidency of David Waxman, the Section of Medical and Dental Hypnosis was formed. A second society, the British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis (BSECH), was also set up a year before, in 1977, and this consisted of psychologists, doctors and dentists with an interest in hypnosis theory and practice. In 2007, the two societies merged to form the 'British Society of Clinical and Academic Hypnosis' (BSCAH). This society only trains health professionals and is interested in furthering research into clinical hypnosis. |
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The [[American Society of Clinical Hypnosis]] (ASCH) is unique among organisations for professionals using hypnosis because members must be licensed healthcare workers with graduate degrees. As an interdisciplinary organisation, ASCH not only provides a classroom to teach professionals how to use hypnosis as a tool in their practice, it provides professionals with a community of experts from different disciplines. The ASCH's missions statement is to provide and encourage education programs to further, in every ethical way, the knowledge, understanding, and application of hypnosis in health care; to encourage research and scientific publication in the field of hypnosis; to promote the further recognition and acceptance of hypnosis as an important tool in clinical health care and focus for scientific research; to cooperate with other professional societies that share mutual goals, ethics and interests; and to provide a professional community for those clinicians and researchers who use hypnosis in their work. The ASCH also publishes the ''[[American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis]]''. |
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:''In stage hypnosis, audience members confuse what is really cooperation with control over the subject's mind. But it is an illusion.'' |
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== History == |
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Sometimes a stage hypnosis begins with an ''induction'' in which the hypnotist asks the entire audience to close their eyes and listen to his words. He lulls everyone participating into a relaxed state with which he may observe who is more susceptible to be hypnotized. Often people are simply unable to relax and "go with" the hypnotist's instructions due to stronger mental control of their mind or simply determination to not be induced. |
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{{excerpt|History of hypnosis}} |
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== See also == |
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There are many observations that can be made of those who do "go under": slumping in their seat, head lolling to the side, falling into the lap of someone next to them, eye lids flickering, and inability to wake when spoken to or prodded unless done so by the hypnotist himself. For those who are simply watching this show and seeing the person next to them become induced, it can be frightening to witness. |
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* [[List of hypnotists]] and [[list of fictional hypnotists]] |
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=== Historical figures === |
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The people whom the hypnotist saw to be easily induced the deepest are approached individually. He will speak briefly to the person and learn their name at which time he may say a few words to them and command them to sleep. For example: "Are you tired, Jane? Would you like to sleep now? Go ahead - SLEEP." Normally this action will cause the individual to immediately appear to have fallen asleep, accompanied by the individual falling to the side. The hypnotist will then speak once more to the person and in the same manner command the person to wake. If this person seems to have been deeply hypnotized but can also wake easily seems unaware of what happened, he or she will be asked to go on the stage. |
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{{div col|colwidth=15em}} |
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* [[Alfred Binet]] |
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* [[James Braid (surgeon)|James Braid]] |
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* [[John Milne Bramwell]] |
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* [[Emile Dantinne]] |
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* [[John Elliotson]] |
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* [[George Estabrooks]] |
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* [[Abbé Faria]] |
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* [[Ainslie Meares]] |
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* [[Franz Anton Mesmer]] |
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* [[Julian Ochorowicz]] |
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* [[Charles Lloyd Tuckey]] |
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* [[Otto Georg Wetterstrand]] |
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{{div col end}} |
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=== Modern researchers === |
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Once several people are assembled, the hypnotist will begin with inducing each of them and testing them to make sure they are perfectly under. If someone isn't working well enough they may be asked to leave. Those who remain are the ones who cannot be waken, even by loud audiences and shouts. They only respond to the hypnotist. He will begin with small commands for action and move up to grand requests. For example: Telling the people on stage that they are cold, but for later, asking them all to show the audience what their first kisses were like. |
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{{div col|colwidth=15em}} |
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* [[Etzel Cardeña]] |
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* [[Alan Gauld]] |
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* [[Jack Stanley Gibson]] |
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* [[Ernest Hilgard]] |
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* [[Albert Abraham Mason]] |
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* [[Ainslie Meares]] |
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* [[Dylan Morgan]] |
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* [[Michel Weber]]<ref>[[Michel Weber]] is working on a Whiteheadian interpretation of hypnotic phenomena: see his «[https://www.academia.edu/869316/_Hypnosis_Panpsychism_in_Action_2008_ Hypnosis: Panpsychism in Action] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160101034018/http://www.academia.edu/869316/_Hypnosis_Panpsychism_in_Action_2008_ |date=1 January 2016 }} », in Michel Weber and William Desmond, Jr. (eds.), ''[https://www.academia.edu/6359521/Michel_Weber_and_Will_Desmond_eds._Handbook_of_Whiteheadian_Process_Thought_2008 Handbook of Whiteheadian Process Thought] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211009213445/https://www.academia.edu/6359521/Michel_Weber_and_Will_Desmond_eds._Handbook_of_Whiteheadian_Process_Thought_2008 |date=9 October 2021 }}'', Frankfurt / Lancaster, ontos verlag, Process Thought X1 & X2, 2008, I, pp. 15–38, 395–414; cf. « [https://www.academia.edu/5679705/_Syntonie_ou_agencement_ethnopsychiatrique_2013_ Syntonie ou agencement ethnopsychiatrique ?] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308143836/https://www.academia.edu/5679705/_Syntonie_ou_agencement_ethnopsychiatrique_2013_ |date=8 March 2021 }} », Michel Weber et Vincent Berne (sous la direction de), ''[https://www.academia.edu/5562658/Michel_Weber_et_Vincent_Berne_sous_la_direction_de_Chromatikon_IX._Annales_de_la_philosophie_en_proc%C3%A8s_Yearbook_of_Philosophy_in_Process_2013 Chromatikon IX. Annales de la philosophie en procès – Yearbook of Philosophy in Process] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200403220501/https://www.academia.edu/5562658/Michel_Weber_et_Vincent_Berne_sous_la_direction_de_Chromatikon_IX._Annales_de_la_philosophie_en_proc%C3%A8s_Yearbook_of_Philosophy_in_Process_2013 |date=3 April 2020 }}'', Les Editions Chromatika, 2013, pp. 55–68.</ref> |
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* [[Michael D. Yapko]] |
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{{div col end}} |
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=== Related subjects === |
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The goal of the performances is to both scare and entertain people. When the hypnotist is quality and is good at what he does, the individuals on stage are under his or her control. Another frightening aspect is the hypnotist, after finding he or she can induce these specific people, can later in life put them under again just as easily as the first time. |
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{{div col|colwidth=15em}} |
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* [[Covert hypnosis]] |
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===Indirect application=== |
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* [[Guided meditation]] |
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In addition to direct application of hypnosis (that is, treatment of conditions by means of hypnosis), there is also indirect application, wherein hypnosis is used to facilitate another procedure. Some people seem more able to display 'enhanced functioning', such as the suppression of pain, under hypnosis. |
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One of the major initial applications of hypnotism was the suppression of pain during medical procedures; this was supplanted (in the late 19th century) by the development of more reliable chemical anesthetics. |
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Some studies suggest that while hypnosis may possess these qualities, they are not exclusive to hypnosis, that it is often the drama and fantasizing that produces the behavior. |
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===Objective Signs of the Hypnotic State: Breuer's Absent Pupillary Reflex Sign=== |
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For those who discount the trance state completely, this is an objective sign, and is the opposite of the normal physiological response. When the subject/patient/client is in 'deep' hypnosis she/he is asked to stay in hypnosis and open their eyes. The pupils are usually dilated. When a penlight is shone into the eyes the pupils will usually stay dilated or react poorly (the normal non-hypnotic response being contraction). What is meant by 'deep hypnosis' is debatable as is the terminology used for that state (somnamulistic, Esdaile, Ultradepth, etc.). This is a brief test and will not take away from therapy. |
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(Dr. William Breuer popularized this test in University lectures to his students after conducting a research project that involved professionals in multiple sites from three countries.) Historically, one particularly early mention of the absent pupillary reflex sign is found in what is deemed one of the more archaic and esoteric books of hypnosis literature called 'Hypnotism' by Carl Sextus, which stated that when people are asked to open their eyes while remaining in deep trance and then when a light is shone into their eyes, their pupils won't contract. He further stated that one could use any suggestion the hypnotist wishes to keep them in hypnosis, but at this point in the trance to not use any suggestions relating to their eyes, visual focus, light or the pupils' dilation and contraction. |
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This information has been published in Dr. Breuer's Book, "Physically Focused Hypnotherapy (-A Practical Guide for Professionals to Treating Physical Conditions in Everyday Practice)" ISBN 0-9711185-0-7. |
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==Professional associations and governmental authorities== |
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Several types of organizations exist to further the professionalism and regulation of practicing hypnotists. For example, professional associations typically offer opportunities for collegial exchanges and professional development in general and/or specialized areas of hypnosis. They also may establish codes of conduct and standards for various certification programs. They may offer such certification programs directly or approve third-party programs. Organizations not affiliated with any professional association may offer their own certificates as well. |
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Governmental authorities, such as state licensing agencies, may establish minimum requirements for credentials that must be earned before one may practice hypnosis within their jurisdiction. Such credentials typically are called certificates or licenses. Some noteworthy examples of professional associations and governmental authorities that offer certification, licensure or statutes that regulate hypnosis follow. |
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== Applications == |
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The applications of hypnosis vary widely. Two distinct applications of hypnosis are its use in [[entertainment]] and health applications. The popular perception of the hypnotic experience is that of the entertainment version. The stage hypnotist uses a variety of methods to relax and focus the subjects, eventually making it appear to the audience that the subject is [[sleep|asleep]] or, popularly termed, in a [[altered state of consciousness|trance]]. During the performance, the subjects seem to obey the commands of the hypnotist to engage in behaviors they might not normally choose to perform. |
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=== Medical === |
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On the other hand, hypnosis applications in the medical and health fields are often experienced very differently. Evidence supports the clinical use of hypnosis for [[pain]] control, for [[Weight loss|weight control]], in the treatment of [[irritable bowel syndrome|irritable-bowel syndrome]], and as an adjunct to [[Cognitive therapy|cognitive behavioral]] and other therapies. Hypnosis, itself, is not a therapy, but is effectively used as an adjunct to other therapies; hence, "[[hypnotherapy]]" is less preferable than the use of hypnosis-related techniques as part of an integrated psychological package. |
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==Popular culture== |
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The notion of hypnotism has elicited many presentations in popular culture. Intrinsically, the notion that people are susceptible to commands outside their conscious control can be an effective way of representing the notion of the fallible narrator. Many works of fiction, such as movies, television programs, and comic books portray hypnotism as a form of total [[mind control]], however most authorities agree that this is an exaggeration. |
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===Hypnosis and the judiciary system=== |
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Hypnotism can be used to: |
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* Recollect knowledge |
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* Take command of a subject |
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* Implant suggestions that the subject will obey while free of the hypnotic trance. |
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In addition, it has been expanded to the notion of remembering "past lives", that is, previous [[reincarnation]]s of the subject, in such movies as ''[[Dead Again]]''. |
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Recollection of knowledge via hypnosis has been used in many cases, but its effectiveness is disputed. Proponents claim that recovered memories have aided in the solving of many crimes, often corroborating with physical evidence which would have been impossible to obtain otherwise. Skeptics suggest that such successes are a function of simple chance, pointing to cases where its use on victims of rape or attempted murder to help them jog their memory in identifying an accused has caused sentences to be doled out to the wrong person. This is because the hypnotist might make suggestions that are more likely to be remembered as "truth". (See also [[false memory]]). Most experts recommend that the practice be used at most like a [[lie detector]], to glean more information, and never as the smoking gun. |
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Hypnosis has proven beneficial, but not in expected ways. During the [[Hillside Strangler]] trial, [[Kenneth Bianchi]] claimed a split personality carried out the crimes of which he was accused. Hypnosis was used extensively to prove that a second personality existed. However, due to faults in Bianchi's facade, which went contrary to what normally happens during hypnosis, it was proved that no other personalities existed and his insanity defense was discredited. |
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The [[Showtime Network]] television show [[Bullshit!]], which features comedy duo [[Penn & Teller]], took a skeptical look at hypnosis in one of their episodes. |
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==See also== |
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* [[Chicken hypnotism]] |
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* [[Highway hypnosis]] |
* [[Highway hypnosis]] |
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* [[Hypnagogia]] |
* [[Hypnagogia]] |
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* [[Hypnoid state]] |
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* [[Hypnosis in popular culture]] |
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* [[Hypnosurgery]] |
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* [[Hypnotherapy]] |
* [[Hypnotherapy]] |
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* [[Hypnotic Ego-Strengthening Procedure]] |
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* [[Hypnofetishism]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Ideomotor phenomenon]] |
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* [[List of ineffective cancer treatments]] |
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* [[Hypnosurgery]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Psychonautics]] |
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* [[ |
* [[Recreational hypnosis]] |
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* [[Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism]] |
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* [[Post-hypnotic suggestion]] |
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* [[Scientology and hypnosis]] |
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* [[Sedative]] (also known as sedative-hypnotic drug) |
* [[Sedative]] (also known as sedative-hypnotic drug) |
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* ''[[The Zoist|The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology & Mesmerism, and Their Applications to Human Welfare]]'' |
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* [[Trout tickling]] |
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{{div col end}} |
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==References== |
== References == |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
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== |
== Bibliography == |
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{{div col|colwidth=30em}} |
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<!-- No longer referenced: # {{note|APA}}— Executive Committee of the American Psychological Association Division of Psychological Hypnosis [1993, Fall]. ''Psychological Hypnosis: A Bulletin of Division 30'', 2, p. 7; citation culled from [http://www.hypnosis-research.org/hypnosis/serious.html hypnosis-research.org].--> |
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* [https://archive.org/details/suggestionandau00baudgoog Baudouin, C. (Paul, E & Paul, C. trans.), ''Suggestion and Autosuggestion: A Psychological and Pedagogical Study Based on the Investigations made by the New Nancy School'', George Allen & Unwin, (London), 1920.] |
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<references /> |
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* {{cite book | vauthors = Braid J |title=Neurypnology; or The Rationale of Nervous Sleep considered in relation with Animal Magnetism |year=1843 |publisher=John Churchill |location=London |url=https://archive.org/details/neurypnologyorra00braiiala}} |
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<!-- No longer referenced: # {{note|Ditborn}}— Dittborn, J.M., and O'Connell, D.N.: ''Behavioral sleep, physiological sleep and hypnotizability''. The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 15: 181, 1967)--> |
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* [https://archive.org/details/observationsont01braigoog Braid, J. (1850), ''Observations on Trance; or, Human Hybernation'', London: John Churchill.] |
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<!-- No longer referenced: # {{note|Hilgard}} Hilgard, E.R., and Hilgard, J.R.: ''Hypnosis in the Relief of Pain''. Los Altos, CA, William Kaufman, 1975.--> |
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* [https://books.google.com/books?id=-1hYAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA848 Braid, J. (1855), "On the Nature and Treatment of Certain Forms of Paralysis", ''Association Medical Journal'', Vol.3, No.141, (14 September 1855), pp. 848–855.] |
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* Brann, L., Owens J. Williamson, A. (eds.) (2015), ''The Handbook of Contemporary Clinical Hypnosis: Theory and Practice'', Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. {{isbn|978-1-1190-5727-7}} |
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* [[Thomas Brown (philosopher)|Brown, T.]] (1851), [https://archive.org/details/lecturesonphilos00browuoft ''Lectures on the Philosophy of the Human Mind (Nineteenth Edition)'', Edinburgh: Adam & Charles Black.] |
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* [https://archive.org/download/b28099734/b28099734.pdf Coates, James (1904), ''Human Magnetism; or, How to Hypnotise: A Practical Handbook for Students of Mesmerism'', London: Nichols & Co.] |
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* {{cite book | author = Gibson HB |title=Hypnosis in Therapy |year=1991 |publisher=Psychology Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dCU8oroKBfgC&pg=PP1|isbn=978-0-8637-7155-2}} |
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* [[Bernard Glueck Sr.|Glueck, B.]], "New Nancy School", ''The Psychoanalytic Review'', Vol. 10, (January 1923), pp. 109–12. |
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* [https://archive.org/details/b24872210_0002 Harte, R., ''Hypnotism and the Doctors, Volume I: Animal Magnetism: Mesmer/De Puysegur'', L.N. Fowler & Co., (London), 1902]. |
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* [https://archive.org/details/hypnotismanddoc00hartgoog Harte, R., ''Hypnotism and the Doctors, Volume II: The Second Commission; Dupotet And Lafontaine; The English School; Braid's Hypnotism; Statuvolism; Pathetism; Electro-Biology'', L.N. Fowler & Co., (London), 1903]. |
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* {{cite book |last=Lynn|first=Steven |title=Theories of Hypnosis: Current Models and Perspectives |year=1991 |publisher=Guilford Press |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ez7Nq80QMtoC&pg=PP1|isbn=978-0-89862-343-7}} |
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* [https://archive.org/details/an-account-of-thomas-browns-philosophy-of-the-human-mind Yeates, Lindsay B. (2005), ''An Account of Thomas Brown’s '''Philosophy of the Human Mind''''', (unpublished manuscript), School of the History and Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, Kensington, New South Wales, Australia.] |
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* [http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/fapi/datastream/unsworks:11299/SOURCE01?view=true Yeates, L.B. (2013), ''James Braid: Surgeon, Gentleman Scientist, and Hypnotist'', Ph.D. Dissertation, School of History and Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, January 2013.] |
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* [https://archive.org/details/hartlands-legacy-ii-yeates-2014 Yeates, L.B. (2014), "Hartland’s Legacy (II): The Ego-Strengthening Monologue", ''Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis'', ''36''(1), pp. 19–36.] |
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* [http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/fapi/datastream/unsworks:47777/bin55efd6f6-374a-478d-8f8d-cf96f616d62f?view=true&xy=01 Yeates, Lindsay B. (2016a), "Émile Coué and his ''Method'' (I): The Chemist of Thought and Human Action", ''Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis'', Volume 38, No. 1, (Autumn 2016), pp. 3–27.] |
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* [http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/fapi/datastream/unsworks:47760/bin73f48d52-f4cb-443f-a9c2-a5c23331c372?view=true&xy=01 Yeates, Lindsay B. (2016b), "Émile Coué and his ''Method'' (II): Hypnotism, Suggestion, Ego-Strengthening, and Autosuggestion", ''Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis'', Volume 38, No.1, (Autumn 2016), pp. 28–54.] |
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* [http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/fapi/datastream/unsworks:47938/bin566a3d8c-5812-4b3a-8b19-37dffb21ecfc?view=true&xy=01 Yeates, Lindsay B. (2016c), "Émile Coué and his ''Method'' (III): Every Day in Every Way", ''Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis'', Volume 38, No. 1, (Autumn 2016), pp. 55–79.] |
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* [http://unsworks.unsw.edu.au/fapi/datastream/unsworks:62996/bin2b21dab5-836e-4118-9120-c1fa25532e00?view=true&xy=01 Yeates, L.B. (2018), "James Braid (II): Mesmerism, Braid’s Crucial Experiment, and Braid’s Discovery of Neuro-Hypnotism", ''Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis'', Vol. 40, No. 1, (Autumn 2018), pp. 40–92.] |
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{{div col end}} |
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== External links == |
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===Books=== |
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{{EB1911 poster|Hypnotism}} |
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*''Hypnosis for the Seriously Curious'', by Kenneth Bowers. NY: W. W. Norton (1993). |
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* {{Commons category-inline}} |
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*''Hypnosis and Suggestion in the Treatment of Pain: A Clinical Guide'', by Joseph Barber. NY: Norton (1996). |
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* Mind control, Research by G. Wagstaff, Dept. of Psychology, University of Liverpool |
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* ''Hypnosis, Compliance and Belief'' by G. Wagstaff, (1981). |
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* ''The Highly Hypnotizable Person'', Michael Heap, Richard J. Brown & David A. Oakley, (2004), Routledge |
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* ''The Deep Trance Training Manual, Volume 1'', [[Igor Ledochowski]], (2003). ISBN 1-899836-97-7 |
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* ''Better and Better Every Day'', [[Emile Coue]], (1960). |
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* ''Uncommon Therapy'', [[Jay Haley]] (about the psychotherapeutic intervention techniques of [[Milton Erickson]]) |
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* ''Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism'', [[Georgia Byng]] |
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* ''Open to suggestion. The uses and abuses of hypnosis''. [[Robert Temple]], 1989, ISBN 1-85030-710-4 |
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* They Call It Hypnosis.[[Baker, Robert]] A. (Buffalo, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 1990). |
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* ''Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis'' [[William S. Kroger, M.D.]], 1977, ISBN 0-397-50377-6 |
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* ''Hypnosis With Friends and Lovers'' [[Freda Morris]], 1979, ISBN 0-06-250600-5 |
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* ''Secret, Don't Tell: The Encyclopedia of Hypnotism'' by Carla Emery ISBN 0-9659930-3-5 [http://www.hypnotism.org/] |
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* ''The Art of Hypnotherapy'' by C. Roy Hunter ISBN 0-7872-7068-7 |
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{{Medical resources |
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==External links== |
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| ICD10 = <!--{{ICD10|Xxx.x}}--> |
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* [http://www.hypnoanalyst.com/ The Synergy of Hypnosis and Analytical therapy - Harry Cannon FNRAH, Harley Street, London, UK] |
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| ICD10CM = <!--{{ICD10CM|Xxx.xxxx}}--> |
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* [http://www.sceh.us/ Society of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis] |
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| ICD9 = <!--{{ICD9|xxx}}--> |
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* [http://ijceh.educ.wsu.edu/ International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis] |
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| ICDO = |
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* [http://www.asch.net/ American Society of Clinical Hypnosis] |
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| OMIM = |
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* [http://www.asch.net/ajch.htm American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis] |
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| DiseasesDB = |
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* [http://www.futurepundit.com/archives/002344.html Hypnosis Studied With fMRI and PET brain scans] (digest of several scientific articles) |
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| MedlinePlus = |
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* [http://skepdic.com/hypnosis.html Hypnosis, from the Skeptic's dictionary], [[Scientific skepticism|skeptical]] review of the veracity of hypnosis. |
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| eMedicineSubj = |
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* [http://www.angelfire.com/wizard2/release/hypnosis.html Hypnosis] reviews and articles related to hynotherapy |
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| eMedicineTopic = |
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* [http://science.howstuffworks.com/hypnosis.htm Hypnosis, from Howstuffworks.com] |
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| PatientUK = |
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*[http://www.spirithome.com/hypnosis.html is hypnosis useful spiritually?] |
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| MeshID = D006990 |
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* [http://www.neurolinguistic.com/pnl/scannedebooks/williamjames/ Principles of Psychology] William James' viewpoint of Hypnotism |
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| GeneReviewsNBK = |
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* [http://www.hypnotherapyfaqs.com/ Hypnotherapy FAQS] |
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| GeneReviewsName = |
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* [http://www.hypnosis101.com/tips.htm A collection of articles about hypnosis] |
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| NORD = |
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* [http://www.psychomaster.com/books/emile Emile Coue's book on Autosuggestion] |
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{{Psychotherapy}} |
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{{Authority control}} |
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===Professional associations=== |
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* [http://www.nrah.co.uk The (British) National Register of Advanced Hypnotherapists] |
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* http://www.hypnosiseire.com Institute of Clinical Hypnotherapy Psychotherapy |
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* [http://www.americanallianceofhypnotists.org American Alliance of Hypnotists] |
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* [http://www.americanboardofclinicalhypnotherapy.com American Board of Clinical Hypnotherapy] |
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* [http://www.hypnosisnetwork.com The Hypnosis Network] Promotes transparency and strict educational requirements in the creation of hypnosis audio programs |
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* [http://www.abmedhyp.org American Board of Medical Hypnosis] |
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* [http://www.hypnotistexaminers.org American Council of Hypnotist Examiners] |
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* [http://lankton.com/dahb/ American Hypnosis Board for Clinical Social Work] |
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* [http://www.apa.org/divisions/div30 American Psychological Association, Division 30 Psychological Hypnosis]: "Brings together psychologists and other professionals interested in scientific and applied hypnosis." |
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* [http://apmha.com American Psychotherapy and Medical Hypnosis Association] |
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* [[American Society of Clinical Hypnosis]], founded by [[Milton Erickson]] in 1957: "Promotes greater acceptance of hypnosis as a clinical tool with broad applications." |
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* Australian Society of Hypnosis "The society of medical and associated professionals" http://www.ozhypnosis.com.au |
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* [http://www.bathh.co.uk British Association of Therapeutical Hypnotists] |
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* [http://www.hypnosishalloffame.com/copho.htm Council of Professional Hypnosis Organizations] (International) |
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* [http://www.general-hypnotherapy-register.com General Hypnotherapy Register] Largest (UK) umbrella body |
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* [http://www.ghsc.co.uk General Hypnotherapy Standards Council] (UK) Overseeing the GHR. |
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* [http://www.natboard.com National Board for Certified Clinical Hypnotherapists] (USA) |
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* [http://www.ngh.net National Guild of Hypnotists] (USA) |
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* [http://www.hypnosiscanada.com Professional Board of Hypnotherapy] (Canada) |
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* [http://www.phpa-online.org Professional Hypnotherapy Practitioners Association] Professional Hypnotherapy Practitioners Association (UK) |
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* [http://www.sceh.us Society of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis] (USA) |
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* Institute of Clinical Hypnosis and Counseling. (India)http://www.hypnotradition.com |
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* [http://www.i-gth.de International Federation of Integrative Depth Psychology in Therapy and Research of Hypnosis - hypnose] (Germany) |
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* [http://hypnosis.org International Registry of Professional Hypnotherapists] |
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* [http://www.hypnosiscredentials.com International Hypnosis Association] |
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* [http://www.isabellereal.co.uk The Loving Gap Foundation] |
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===Governmental authorities=== |
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* [http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/statute.html California statute] (Enter Chapter "820", Year "2002") |
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* [http://www.leg.state.fl.us/Statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&URL=Ch0485/titl0485.htm Florida statute] |
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* [http://www.in.gov/pla/bandc/ihc/index.html Indiana Hypnotist Committee] |
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*http://www.hypnotherapists.org.uk/training/training_hpd.asp |
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===Historical sites=== |
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*[http://www.angelfire.com/pr/hypno The Hypnosis Museum of Historical Equipment & Methodology] |
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Latest revision as of 00:35, 5 January 2025
Hypnosis | |
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MeSH | D006990 |
Hypnosis |
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Hypnosis is a human condition involving focused attention (the selective attention/selective inattention hypothesis, SASI),[2] reduced peripheral awareness, and an enhanced capacity to respond to suggestion.[3]
There are competing theories explaining hypnosis and related phenomena. Altered state theories see hypnosis as an altered state of mind or trance, marked by a level of awareness different from the ordinary state of consciousness.[4][5] In contrast, non-state theories see hypnosis as, variously, a type of placebo effect,[6][7] a redefinition of an interaction with a therapist[8] or a form of imaginative role enactment.[9][10][11]
During hypnosis, a person is said to have heightened focus and concentration[12][13] and an increased response to suggestions.[14] Hypnosis usually begins with a hypnotic induction involving a series of preliminary instructions and suggestions. The use of hypnosis for therapeutic purposes is referred to as "hypnotherapy",[15] while its use as a form of entertainment for an audience is known as "stage hypnosis", a form of mentalism.
Hypnosis-based therapies for the management of irritable bowel syndrome and menopause are supported by evidence.[16][17] The use of hypnosis as a form of therapy to retrieve and integrate early trauma is controversial within the scientific mainstream. Research indicates that hypnotising an individual may aid the formation of false memories,[18][19] and that hypnosis "does not help people recall events more accurately".[20] Medical hypnosis is often considered pseudoscience or quackery.[21]
Etymology
[edit]The words hypnosis and hypnotism both derive from the term neuro-hypnotism (nervous sleep), all of which were coined by Étienne Félix d'Henin de Cuvillers in the 1820s. The term hypnosis is derived from the ancient Greek ὑπνος hypnos, "sleep", and the suffix -ωσις -osis, or from ὑπνόω hypnoō, "put to sleep" (stem of aorist hypnōs-) and the suffix -is.[22][23] These words were popularised in English by the Scottish surgeon James Braid (to whom they are sometimes wrongly attributed) around 1841.[citation needed] Braid based his practice on that developed by Franz Mesmer and his followers (which was called "Mesmerism" or "animal magnetism"), but differed in his theory as to how the procedure worked.
Definition and classification
[edit]A person in a state of hypnosis has focused attention, deeply relaxed physical and mental state and has increased suggestibility.[24]
The hypnotized individual appears to heed only the communications of the hypnotist and typically responds in an uncritical, automatic fashion while ignoring all aspects of the environment other than those pointed out by the hypnotist. In a hypnotic state an individual tends to see, feel, smell, and otherwise perceive in accordance with the hypnotist's suggestions, even though these suggestions may be in apparent contradiction to the actual stimuli present in the environment. The effects of hypnosis are not limited to sensory change; even the subject's memory and awareness of self may be altered by suggestion, and the effects of the suggestions may be extended (post-hypnotically) into the subject's subsequent waking activity.[25]
It could be said that hypnotic suggestion is explicitly intended to make use of the placebo effect. For example, in 1994, Irving Kirsch characterized hypnosis as a "non-deceptive placebo", i.e., a method that openly makes use of suggestion and employs methods to amplify its effects.[6][7]
A definition of hypnosis, derived from academic psychology, was provided in 2005, when the Society for Psychological Hypnosis, Division 30 of the American Psychological Association (APA), published the following formal definition:
Hypnosis typically involves an introduction to the procedure during which the subject is told that suggestions for imaginative experiences will be presented. The hypnotic induction is an extended initial suggestion for using one's imagination, and may contain further elaborations of the introduction. A hypnotic procedure is used to encourage and evaluate responses to suggestions. When using hypnosis, one person (the subject) is guided by another (the hypnotist) to respond to suggestions for changes in subjective experience, alterations in perception,[26][27] sensation,[28] emotion, thought or behavior. Persons can also learn self-hypnosis, which is the act of administering hypnotic procedures on one's own. If the subject responds to hypnotic suggestions, it is generally inferred that hypnosis has been induced. Many believe that hypnotic responses and experiences are characteristic of a hypnotic state. While some think that it is not necessary to use the word "hypnosis" as part of the hypnotic induction, others view it as essential.[29]
Michael Nash provides a list of eight definitions of hypnosis by different authors, in addition to his own view that hypnosis is "a special case of psychological regression":
- Janet, near the turn of the century, and more recently Ernest Hilgard ..., have defined hypnosis in terms of dissociation.
- Social psychologists Sarbin and Coe ... have described hypnosis in terms of role theory. Hypnosis is a role that people play; they act "as if" they were hypnotised.
- T. X. Barber ... defined hypnosis in terms of nonhypnotic behavioural parameters, such as task motivation and the act of labeling the situation as hypnosis.
- In his early writings, Weitzenhoffer ... conceptualised hypnosis as a state of enhanced suggestibility. Most recently ... he has defined hypnotism as "a form of influence by one person exerted on another through the medium or agency of suggestion."
- Psychoanalysts Gill and Brenman ... described hypnosis by using the psychoanalytic concept of "regression in the service of the ego".
- Edmonston ... has assessed hypnosis as being merely a state of relaxation.
- Spiegel and Spiegel... have implied that hypnosis is a biological capacity.[30]
- Erickson ... is considered the leading exponent of the position that hypnosis is a special, inner-directed, altered state of functioning.[30]
Joe Griffin and Ivan Tyrrell (the originators of the human givens approach) define hypnosis as "any artificial way of accessing the REM state, the same brain state in which dreaming occurs" and suggest that this definition, when properly understood, resolves "many of the mysteries and controversies surrounding hypnosis".[31] They see the REM state as being vitally important for life itself, for programming in our instinctive knowledge initially (after Dement[32] and Jouvet[33]) and then for adding to this throughout life. They attempt to explain this by asserting that, in a sense, all learning is post-hypnotic, which they say explains why the number of ways people can be put into a hypnotic state are so varied: according to them, anything that focuses a person's attention, inward or outward, puts them into a trance.[34]
Induction
[edit]Hypnosis is normally preceded by a "hypnotic induction" technique. Traditionally, this was interpreted as a method of putting the subject into a "hypnotic trance"; however, subsequent "nonstate" theorists have viewed it differently, seeing it as a means of heightening client expectation, defining their role, focusing attention, etc. The induction techniques and methods are dependent on the depth of hypnotic trance level and for each stage of trance, the number of which in some sources ranges from 30 stages to 50 stages, there are different types of inductions.[35] There are several different induction techniques. One of the most influential methods was Braid's "eye-fixation" technique, also known as "Braidism". Many variations of the eye-fixation approach exist, including the induction used in the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale (SHSS), the most widely used research tool in the field of hypnotism.[36] Braid's original description of his induction is as follows:
Take any bright object (e.g. a lancet case) between the thumb and fore and middle fingers of the left hand; hold it from about eight to fifteen inches from the eyes, at such position above the forehead as may be necessary to produce the greatest possible strain upon the eyes and eyelids, and enable the patient to maintain a steady fixed stare at the object.
The patient must be made to understand that he is to keep the eyes steadily fixed on the object, and the mind riveted on the idea of that one object. It will be observed, that owing to the consensual adjustment of the eyes, the pupils will be at first contracted: They will shortly begin to dilate, and, after they have done so to a considerable extent, and have assumed a wavy motion, if the fore and middle fingers of the right hand, extended and a little separated, are carried from the object toward the eyes, most probably the eyelids will close involuntarily, with a vibratory motion. If this is not the case, or the patient allows the eyeballs to move, desire him to begin anew, giving him to understand that he is to allow the eyelids to close when the fingers are again carried towards the eyes, but that the eyeballs must be kept fixed, in the same position, and the mind riveted to the one idea of the object held above the eyes. In general, it will be found, that the eyelids close with a vibratory motion, or become spasmodically closed.[37]
Braid later acknowledged that the hypnotic induction technique was not necessary in every case, and subsequent researchers have generally found that on average it contributes less than previously expected to the effect of hypnotic suggestions.[38] Variations and alternatives to the original hypnotic induction techniques were subsequently developed. However, this method is still considered authoritative.[citation needed] In 1941, Robert White wrote: "It can be safely stated that nine out of ten hypnotic techniques call for reclining posture, muscular relaxation, and optical fixation followed by eye closure."[39]
Suggestion
[edit]When James Braid first described hypnotism, he did not use the term "suggestion" but referred instead to the act of focusing the conscious mind of the subject upon a single dominant idea. Braid's main therapeutic strategy involved stimulating or reducing physiological functioning in different regions of the body. In his later works, however, Braid placed increasing emphasis upon the use of a variety of different verbal and non-verbal forms of suggestion, including the use of "waking suggestion" and self-hypnosis. Subsequently, Hippolyte Bernheim shifted the emphasis from the physical state of hypnosis on to the psychological process of verbal suggestion:
I define hypnotism as the induction of a peculiar psychical [i.e., mental] condition which increases the susceptibility to suggestion. Often, it is true, the [hypnotic] sleep that may be induced facilitates suggestion, but it is not the necessary preliminary. It is suggestion that rules hypnotism.[40]
Bernheim's conception of the primacy of verbal suggestion in hypnotism dominated the subject throughout the 20th century, leading some authorities to declare him the father of modern hypnotism.[41]
Contemporary hypnotism uses a variety of suggestion forms including direct verbal suggestions, "indirect" verbal suggestions such as requests or insinuations, metaphors and other rhetorical figures of speech, and non-verbal suggestion in the form of mental imagery, voice tonality, and physical manipulation. A distinction is commonly made between suggestions delivered "permissively" and those delivered in a more "authoritarian" manner. Harvard hypnotherapist Deirdre Barrett writes that most modern research suggestions are designed to bring about immediate responses, whereas hypnotherapeutic suggestions are usually post-hypnotic ones that are intended to trigger responses affecting behaviour for periods ranging from days to a lifetime in duration. The hypnotherapeutic ones are often repeated in multiple sessions before they achieve peak effectiveness.[42]
Conscious and unconscious mind
[edit]Some hypnotists view suggestion as a form of communication that is directed primarily to the subject's conscious mind,[43] whereas others view it as a means of communicating with the "unconscious" or "subconscious" mind.[43][44] These concepts were introduced into hypnotism at the end of the 19th century by Sigmund Freud and Pierre Janet. Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory describes conscious thoughts as being at the surface of the mind and unconscious processes as being deeper in the mind.[45] Braid, Bernheim, and other Victorian pioneers of hypnotism did not refer to the unconscious mind but saw hypnotic suggestions as being addressed to the subject's conscious mind. Indeed, Braid actually defines hypnotism as focused (conscious) attention upon a dominant idea (or suggestion). Different views regarding the nature of the mind have led to different conceptions of suggestion. Hypnotists who believe that responses are mediated primarily by an "unconscious mind", like Milton Erickson, make use of indirect suggestions such as metaphors or stories whose intended meaning may be concealed from the subject's conscious mind. The concept of subliminal suggestion depends upon this view of the mind. By contrast, hypnotists who believe that responses to suggestion are primarily mediated by the conscious mind, such as Theodore Barber and Nicholas Spanos, have tended to make more use of direct verbal suggestions and instructions.[46]
Ideo-dynamic reflex
[edit]The first neuropsychological theory of hypnotic suggestion was introduced early by James Braid who adopted his friend and colleague William Carpenter's theory of the ideo-motor reflex response to account for the phenomenon of hypnotism. Carpenter had observed from close examination of everyday experience that, under certain circumstances, the mere idea of a muscular movement could be sufficient to produce a reflexive, or automatic, contraction or movement of the muscles involved, albeit in a very small degree. Braid extended Carpenter's theory to encompass the observation that a wide variety of bodily responses besides muscular movement can be thus affected, for example, the idea of sucking a lemon can automatically stimulate salivation, a secretory response. Braid, therefore, adopted the term "ideo-dynamic", meaning "by the power of an idea", to explain a broad range of "psycho-physiological" (mind–body) phenomena. Braid coined the term "mono-ideodynamic" to refer to the theory that hypnotism operates by concentrating attention on a single idea in order to amplify the ideo-dynamic reflex response. Variations of the basic ideo-motor, or ideo-dynamic, theory of suggestion have continued to exercise considerable influence over subsequent theories of hypnosis, including those of Clark L. Hull, Hans Eysenck, and Ernest Rossi.[43] In Victorian psychology the word "idea" encompasses any mental representation, including mental imagery, memories, etc.
Susceptibility
[edit]Braid made a rough distinction between different stages of hypnosis, which he termed the first and second conscious stage of hypnotism;[47] he later replaced this with a distinction between "sub-hypnotic", "full hypnotic", and "hypnotic coma" stages.[47] Jean-Martin Charcot made a similar distinction between stages which he named somnambulism, lethargy, and catalepsy. However, Ambroise-Auguste Liébeault and Hippolyte Bernheim introduced more complex hypnotic "depth" scales based on a combination of behavioural, physiological, and subjective responses, some of which were due to direct suggestion and some of which were not. In the first few decades of the 20th century, these early clinical "depth" scales were superseded by more sophisticated "hypnotic susceptibility" scales based on experimental research. The most influential were the Davis–Husband and Friedlander–Sarbin scales developed in the 1930s. André Weitzenhoffer and Ernest R. Hilgard developed the Stanford Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility in 1959, consisting of 12 suggestion test items following a standardised hypnotic eye-fixation induction script, and this has become one of the most widely referenced research tools in the field of hypnosis. Soon after, in 1962, Ronald Shor and Emily Carota Orne developed a similar group scale called the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Susceptibility (HGSHS).
Whereas the older "depth scales" tried to infer the level of "hypnotic trance" from supposed observable signs such as spontaneous amnesia, most subsequent scales have measured the degree of observed or self-evaluated responsiveness to specific suggestion tests such as direct suggestions of arm rigidity (catalepsy). The Stanford, Harvard, HIP, and most other susceptibility scales convert numbers into an assessment of a person's susceptibility as "high", "medium", or "low". Approximately 80% of the population are medium, 10% are high, and 10% are low. There is some controversy as to whether this is distributed on a "normal" bell-shaped curve or whether it is bi-modal with a small "blip" of people at the high end.[48] Hypnotisability scores are highly stable over a person's lifetime. Research by Deirdre Barrett has found that there are two distinct types of highly susceptible subjects, which she terms fantasisers and dissociaters. Fantasisers score high on absorption scales, find it easy to block out real-world stimuli without hypnosis, spend much time daydreaming, report imaginary companions as a child, and grew up with parents who encouraged imaginary play. Dissociaters often have a history of childhood abuse or other trauma, learned to escape into numbness, and to forget unpleasant events. Their association to "daydreaming" was often going blank rather than creating vividly recalled fantasies. Both score equally high on formal scales of hypnotic susceptibility.[49][50][51]
Individuals with dissociative identity disorder have the highest hypnotisability of any clinical group, followed by those with post-traumatic stress disorder.[52]
Applications
[edit]There are numerous applications for hypnosis across multiple fields of interest, including medical/psychotherapeutic uses, military uses, self-improvement, and entertainment. The American Medical Association currently has no official stance on the medical use of hypnosis.
Hypnosis has been used as a supplemental approach to cognitive behavioral therapy since as early as 1949. Hypnosis was defined in relation to classical conditioning; where the words of the therapist were the stimuli and the hypnosis would be the conditioned response. Some traditional cognitive behavioral therapy methods were based in classical conditioning. It would include inducing a relaxed state and introducing a feared stimulus. One way of inducing the relaxed state was through hypnosis.[53]
Hypnotism has also been used in forensics, sports, education, physical therapy, and rehabilitation.[54] Hypnotism has also been employed by artists for creative purposes, most notably the surrealist circle of André Breton who employed hypnosis, automatic writing, and sketches for creative purposes. Hypnotic methods have been used to re-experience drug states[55] and mystical experiences.[56][57] Self-hypnosis is popularly used to quit smoking, alleviate stress and anxiety, promote weight loss, and induce sleep hypnosis. Stage hypnosis can persuade people to perform unusual public feats.[58]
Some people have drawn analogies between certain aspects of hypnotism and areas such as crowd psychology, religious hysteria, and ritual trances in preliterate tribal cultures.[59]
Hypnotherapy
[edit]Hypnotherapy is a use of hypnosis in psychotherapy.[60][61] It is used by licensed physicians, psychologists, and others. Physicians and psychologists may use hypnosis to treat depression, anxiety, eating disorders, sleep disorders, compulsive gambling, phobias and post-traumatic stress,[62][63] while certified hypnotherapists who are not physicians or psychologists often treat smoking and weight management. Hypnotherapy was historically used in psychiatric and legal settings to enhance the recall of repressed or degraded memories, but this application of the technique has declined as scientific evidence accumulated that hypnotherapy can increase confidence in false memories.[64]
Hypnotherapy is viewed as a helpful adjunct by proponents, having additive effects when treating psychological disorders, such as these, along with scientifically proven cognitive therapies. The effectiveness of hypnotherapy has not yet been accurately assessed,[65] and, due to the lack of evidence indicating any level of efficiency,[66] it is regarded as a type of alternative medicine by numerous reputable medical organisations, such as the National Health Service.[67][68]
Preliminary research has expressed brief hypnosis interventions as possibly being a useful tool for managing painful HIV-DSP because of its history of usefulness in pain management, its long-term effectiveness of brief interventions, the ability to teach self-hypnosis to patients, the cost-effectiveness of the intervention, and the advantage of using such an intervention as opposed to the use of pharmaceutical drugs.[3]
Modern hypnotherapy has been used, with varying success, in a variety of forms, such as:
- Addictions[69][70]
- Age regression hypnotherapy (or "hypnoanalysis")
- Cognitive-behavioural hypnotherapy, or clinical hypnosis combined with elements of cognitive behavioural therapy[71]
- Ericksonian hypnotherapy
- Fears and phobia[72][73][74][75][76]
- Habit control[77][78][79]
- Pain management[80][81][82][83]
- Psychotherapy[84]
- Relaxation[85]
- Reduce patient behavior (e.g., scratching) that hinders the treatment of skin disease[86]
- Soothing anxious surgical patients
- Sports performance[87][88]
- Weight loss[89][90][91]
In a January 2001 article in Psychology Today,[92] Harvard psychologist Deirdre Barrett wrote:
A hypnotic trance is not therapeutic in and of itself, but specific suggestions and images fed to clients in a trance can profoundly alter their behavior. As they rehearse the new ways they want to think and feel, they lay the groundwork for changes in their future actions...
Barrett described specific ways this is operationalised for habit change and amelioration of phobias. In her 1998 book of hypnotherapy case studies,[62] she reviews the clinical research on hypnosis with dissociative disorders, smoking cessation, and insomnia, and describes successful treatments of these complaints.
In a July 2001 article for Scientific American titled "The Truth and the Hype of Hypnosis", Michael Nash wrote that, "using hypnosis, scientists have temporarily created hallucinations, compulsions, certain types of memory loss, false memories, and delusions in the laboratory so that these phenomena can be studied in a controlled environment."[93]
Menopause
[edit]There is evidence supporting the use of hypnotherapy in the treatment of menopause related symptoms, including hot flashes.[94] The North American Menopause Society recommends hypnotherapy for the nonhormonal management of menopause-associated vasomotor symptoms, giving it the highest level of evidence.[17]
Irritable bowel syndrome
[edit]Hypnotherapy has been studied for the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome.[95][96] Hypnosis for IBS has received moderate support in the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence guidance published for UK health services.[97] It has been used as an aid or alternative to chemical anesthesia,[98][99][100] and it has been studied as a way to soothe skin ailments.[101]
Pain management
[edit]A number of studies show that hypnosis can reduce the pain experienced during burn-wound debridement,[102] bone marrow aspirations, and childbirth.[103][104] The International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis found that hypnosis relieved the pain of 75% of 933 subjects participating in 27 different experiments.[93]
Hypnosis is effective in decreasing the fear of cancer treatment[105] reducing pain from[106] and coping with cancer[107] and other chronic conditions.[93] Nausea and other symptoms related to incurable diseases may also be managed with hypnosis.[108][109][110] Some practitioners have claimed hypnosis might help boost the immune system of people with cancer. However, according to the American Cancer Society, "available scientific evidence does not support the idea that hypnosis can influence the development or progression of cancer."[111]
Hypnosis has been used as a pain relieving technique during dental surgery,[112] and related pain management regimens as well. Researchers like Jerjes and his team have reported that hypnosis can help even those patients who have acute to severe orodental pain.[113] Additionally, Meyerson and Uziel have suggested that hypnotic methods have been found to be highly fruitful for alleviating anxiety in patients with severe dental phobia.[114]
For some psychologists who uphold the altered state theory of hypnosis, pain relief in response to hypnosis is said to be the result of the brain's dual-processing functionality. This effect is obtained either through the process of selective attention or dissociation, in which both theories involve the presence of activity in pain receptive regions of the brain, and a difference in the processing of the stimuli by the hypnotised subject.[115]
The American Psychological Association published a study comparing the effects of hypnosis, ordinary suggestion, and placebo in reducing pain. The study found that highly suggestible individuals experienced a greater reduction in pain from hypnosis compared with placebo, whereas less suggestible subjects experienced no pain reduction from hypnosis when compared with placebo. Ordinary non-hypnotic suggestion also caused reduction in pain compared to placebo, but was able to reduce pain in a wider range of subjects (both high and low suggestible) than hypnosis. The results showed that it is primarily the subject's responsiveness to suggestion, whether within the context of hypnosis or not, that is the main determinant of causing reduction in pain.[116]
Other uses of hypnotherapy
[edit]In 2019, a Cochrane review was unable to find evidence of benefit of hypnosis in smoking cessation, and suggested if there is, it is small at best.[117]
Hypnosis may be useful as an adjunct therapy for weight loss. A 1996 meta-analysis studying hypnosis combined with cognitive behavioural therapy found that people using both treatments lost more weight than people using cognitive behavioural therapy alone.[89]
American psychiatric nurses, in most medical facilities, are allowed to administer hypnosis to patients in order to relieve symptoms such as anxiety, arousal, negative behaviours, uncontrollable behaviour, and to improve self-esteem and confidence. This is permitted only when they have been completely trained about their clinical side effects and while under supervision when administering it.[118]
Forensic hypnosis
[edit]The use of hypnosis to exhume information thought to be buried within the mind in the investigative process and as evidence in court became increasingly popular from the 1950s to the early 1980s with its use being debated into the 1990s when its popular use mostly diminished.[119] Forensic hypnosis's uses are hindered by concerns with its reliability and accuracy. Controversy surrounds the use of hypnotherapy to retrieve memories, especially those from early childhood. The American Medical Association and the American Psychological Association caution against recovered-memory therapy in cases of alleged childhood trauma, stating that "it is impossible, without corroborative evidence, to distinguish a true memory from a false one."[120] Past life regression is regarded as pseudoscience.[121][122]
Military
[edit]A 2006 declassified 1966 document obtained by the US Freedom of Information Act archive shows that hypnosis was investigated for military applications.[123][non-primary source needed] The full paper explores the potentials of operational uses.[123] The overall conclusion of the study was that there was no evidence that hypnosis could be used for military applications, and no clear evidence whether "hypnosis" is a definable phenomenon outside ordinary suggestion, motivation, and subject expectancy. According to the document:
The use of hypnosis in intelligence would present certain technical problems not encountered in the clinic or laboratory. To obtain compliance from a resistant source, for example, it would be necessary to hypnotise the source under essentially hostile circumstances. There is no good evidence, clinical or experimental, that this can be done.[123]
Furthermore, the document states that:
It would be difficult to find an area of scientific interest more beset by divided professional opinion and contradictory experimental evidence... No one can say whether hypnosis is a qualitatively unique state with some physiological and conditioned response components or only a form of suggestion induced by high motivation and a positive relationship between hypnotist and subject... T. X. Barber has produced "hypnotic deafness" and "hypnotic blindness", analgesia and other responses seen in hypnosis—all without hypnotising anyone... Orne has shown that unhypnotised persons can be motivated to equal and surpass the supposed superhuman physical feats seen in hypnosis.[123]
The study concluded that there are no reliable accounts of its effective use by an intelligence service in history.[123]
Research into hypnosis in military applications is further verified by the Project MKUltra experiments, also conducted by the CIA.[124][non-primary source needed] According to Congressional testimony,[125] the CIA experimented with utilising LSD and hypnosis for mind control. Many of these programs were done domestically and on participants who were not informed of the study's purposes or that they would be given drugs.[125]
Self-hypnosis
[edit]Self-hypnosis happens when a person hypnotises oneself, commonly involving the use of autosuggestion. The technique is often used to increase motivation for a diet, to quit smoking, or to reduce stress. People who practise self-hypnosis sometimes require assistance; some people use devices known as mind machines to assist in the process, whereas others use hypnotic recordings.
Self-hypnosis is claimed to help with stage fright, relaxation, and physical well-being.[126]
Stage hypnosis
[edit]Stage hypnosis is a form of entertainment, traditionally employed in a club or theatre before an audience. Due to stage hypnotists' showmanship, many people believe that hypnosis is a form of mind control. Stage hypnotists typically attempt to hypnotise the entire audience and then select individuals who are "under" to come up on stage and perform embarrassing acts, while the audience watches. However, the effects of stage hypnosis are probably due to a combination of psychological factors, participant selection, suggestibility, physical manipulation, stagecraft, and trickery.[127] The desire to be the centre of attention, having an excuse to violate their own fear suppressors, and the pressure to please are thought to convince subjects to "play along".[128] Books by stage hypnotists sometimes explicitly describe the use of deception in their acts; for example, Ormond McGill's New Encyclopedia of Stage Hypnotism describes an entire "fake hypnosis" act that depends upon the use of private whispers throughout.[citation needed]
Music
[edit]The idea of music as hypnosis developed from the work of Franz Mesmer. Instruments such as pianos, violins, harps and, especially, the glass harmonica often featured in Mesmer's treatments; and were considered to contribute to Mesmer's success.[129]
Hypnotic music became an important part in the development of a 'physiological psychology' that regarded the hypnotic state as an 'automatic' phenomenon that links to physical reflex. In their experiments with sound hypnosis, Jean-Martin Charcot used gongs and tuning forks, and Ivan Pavlov used bells. The intention behind their experiments was to prove that physiological response to sound could be automatic, bypassing the conscious mind.[130]
Satanic brainwashing
[edit]In the 1980s and 1990s, a moral panic took place in the US fearing Satanic ritual abuse. As part of this, certain books such as The Devil's Disciples claimed that some bands, particularly in the musical genre of heavy metal, brainwashed American teenagers with subliminal messages to lure them into the worship of the devil, sexual immorality, murder, and especially suicide.[131]
Crime
[edit]Various people have been suspected of or convicted for hypnosis-related crimes, including robbery and sexual abuse.
In 1951, Palle Hardrup shot and killed two people during a botched robbery in Copenhagen - see Hypnosis murders. Hardrup claimed that his friend and former cellmate Bjørn Schouw Nielsen had hypnotised him to commit the robbery, inadvertently causing the deaths. Both were sentenced to jail time.[132]
In 2013, the then-40-year-old amateur hypnotist Timothy Porter attempted to sexually abuse his female weight-loss client. She reported awaking from a trance and finding him behind her with his pants down, telling her to touch herself. He was subsequently called to court and included on the sex offender list.[133] In 2015, Gary Naraido, then 52, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for several hypnosis-related sexual abuse charges. Besides the primary charge by a 22-year-old woman who he sexually abused in a hotel under the guise of a free therapy session, he also admitted to having sexually assaulted a 14-year-old girl.[134] In December 2018, a Brazilian medium named João Teixeira de Faria (also known as "João de Deus"), famous for performing Spiritual Surgeries through hypnosis techniques, was accused of sexual abuse by 12 women.[135][136] In 2016 an Ohio lawyer was sentenced to 12 years of prison after hypnotizing a dozen different clients into committing sexual acts under the guise of a mindfulness exercise.[137]
Sexual
[edit]State vs. nonstate
[edit]The central theoretical disagreement regarding hypnosis is known as the "state versus nonstate" debate. When Braid introduced the concept of hypnotism, he equivocated over the nature of the "state", sometimes describing it as a specific sleep-like neurological state comparable to animal hibernation or yogic meditation, while at other times he emphasised that hypnotism encompasses a number of different stages or states that are an extension of ordinary psychological and physiological processes. Overall, Braid appears to have moved from a more "special state" understanding of hypnotism toward a more complex "nonstate" orientation.[citation needed]
State theorists interpret the effects of hypnotism as due primarily to a specific, abnormal, and uniform psychological or physiological state of some description, often referred to as "hypnotic trance" or an "altered state of consciousness". Nonstate theorists rejected the idea of hypnotic trance and interpret the effects of hypnotism as due to a combination of multiple task-specific factors derived from normal cognitive, behavioural, and social psychology, such as social role-perception and favorable motivation (Sarbin), active imagination and positive cognitive set (Barber), response expectancy (Kirsch), and the active use of task-specific subjective strategies (Spanos). The personality psychologist Robert White is often cited as providing one of the first nonstate definitions of hypnosis in a 1941 article:
Hypnotic behaviour is meaningful, goal-directed striving, its most general goal being to behave like a hypnotised person as this is continuously defined by the operator and understood by the client.[138]
Put simply, it is often claimed that, whereas the older "special state" interpretation emphasises the difference between hypnosis and ordinary psychological processes, the "nonstate" interpretation emphasises their similarity.
Comparisons between hypnotised and non-hypnotised subjects suggest that, if a "hypnotic trance" does exist, it only accounts for a small proportion of the effects attributed to hypnotic suggestion, most of which can be replicated without hypnotic induction.[139][140][self-published source?]
Hyper-suggestibility
[edit]Braid can be taken to imply, in later writings, that hypnosis is largely a state of heightened suggestibility induced by expectation and focused attention. In particular, Hippolyte Bernheim became known as the leading proponent of the "suggestion theory" of hypnosis, at one point going so far as to declare that there is no hypnotic state, only heightened suggestibility. There is a general consensus that heightened suggestibility is an essential characteristic of hypnosis. In 1933, Clark L. Hull wrote:
If a subject after submitting to the hypnotic procedure shows no genuine increase in susceptibility to any suggestions whatever, there seems no point in calling him hypnotised, regardless of how fully and readily he may respond to suggestions of lid-closure and other superficial sleeping behaviour.[141]
Conditioned inhibition
[edit]Ivan Pavlov stated that hypnotic suggestion provided the best example of a conditioned reflex response in human beings; i.e., that responses to suggestions were learned associations triggered by the words used:
Speech, on account of the whole preceding life of the adult, is connected up with all the internal and external stimuli which can reach the cortex, signaling all of them and replacing all of them, and therefore it can call forth all those reactions of the organism which are normally determined by the actual stimuli themselves. We can, therefore, regard "suggestion" as the most simple form of a typical reflex in man.[142]
He also believed that hypnosis was a "partial sleep", meaning that a generalised inhibition of cortical functioning could be encouraged to spread throughout regions of the brain. He observed that the various degrees of hypnosis did not significantly differ physiologically from the waking state and hypnosis depended on insignificant changes of environmental stimuli. Pavlov also suggested that lower-brain-stem mechanisms were involved in hypnotic conditioning.[143][144]
Pavlov's ideas combined with those of his rival Vladimir Bekhterev and became the basis of hypnotic psychotherapy in the Soviet Union, as documented in the writings of his follower K.I. Platonov. Soviet theories of hypnotism subsequently influenced the writings of Western behaviourally oriented hypnotherapists such as Andrew Salter.
Neuropsychology
[edit]Changes in brain activity have been found in some studies of highly responsive hypnotic subjects. These changes vary depending upon the type of suggestions being given.[145][146] The state of light to medium hypnosis, where the body undergoes physical and mental relaxation, is associated with a pattern mostly of alpha waves.[147][better source needed] However, what these results indicate is unclear. They may indicate that suggestions genuinely produce changes in perception or experience that are not simply a result of imagination. However, in normal circumstances without hypnosis, the brain regions associated with motion detection are activated both when motion is seen and when motion is imagined, without any changes in the subjects' perception or experience.[148] This may therefore indicate that highly suggestible hypnotic subjects are simply activating to a greater extent the areas of the brain used in imagination, without real perceptual changes. It is, however, premature to claim that hypnosis and meditation are mediated by similar brain systems and neural mechanisms.[149]
Another study has demonstrated that a colour hallucination suggestion given to subjects in hypnosis activated colour-processing regions of the occipital cortex.[150][non-primary source needed] A 2004 review of research examining the EEG laboratory work in this area concludes:
Hypnosis is not a unitary state and therefore should show different patterns of EEG activity depending upon the task being experienced. In our evaluation of the literature, enhanced theta is observed during hypnosis when there is task performance or concentrative hypnosis, but not when the highly hypnotizable individuals are passively relaxed, somewhat sleepy and/or more diffuse in their attention.[151]
Studies have shown an association of hypnosis with stronger theta-frequency activity as well as with changes to the gamma-frequency activity.[152][non-primary source needed] Neuroimaging techniques have been used to investigate neural correlates of hypnosis.[153][154]
The induction phase of hypnosis may also affect the activity in brain regions that control intention and process conflict. Anna Gosline claims:
Gruzelier and his colleagues studied brain activity using an fMRI while subjects completed a standard cognitive exercise, called the Stroop task. The team screened subjects before the study and chose 12 that were highly susceptible to hypnosis and 12 with low susceptibility. They all completed the task in the fMRI under normal conditions and then again under hypnosis. Throughout the study, both groups were consistent in their task results, achieving similar scores regardless of their mental state. During their first task session, before hypnosis, there were no significant differences in brain activity between the groups. But under hypnosis, Gruzelier found that the highly susceptible subjects showed significantly more brain activity in the anterior cingulate gyrus than the weakly susceptible subjects. This area of the brain has been shown to respond to errors and evaluate emotional outcomes. The highly susceptible group also showed much greater brain activity on the left side of the prefrontal cortex than the weakly susceptible group. This is an area involved with higher level cognitive processing and behaviour.[155][156]
Dissociation
[edit]Pierre Janet originally developed the idea of dissociation of consciousness from his work with hysterical patients. He believed that hypnosis was an example of dissociation, whereby areas of an individual's behavioural control separate from ordinary awareness. Hypnosis would remove some control from the conscious mind, and the individual would respond with autonomic, reflexive behaviour. Weitzenhoffer describes hypnosis via this theory as "dissociation of awareness from the majority of sensory and even strictly neural events taking place."[41]
Neodissociation
[edit]Ernest Hilgard, who developed the "neodissociation" theory of hypnotism, hypothesised that hypnosis causes the subjects to divide their consciousness voluntarily. One part responds to the hypnotist while the other retains awareness of reality. Hilgard made subjects take an ice water bath. None mentioned the water being cold or feeling pain. Hilgard then asked the subjects to lift their index finger if they felt pain and 70% of the subjects lifted their index finger. This showed that, even though the subjects were listening to the suggestive hypnotist, they still sensed the water's temperature.[157]
Social role-taking theory
[edit]The main theorist who pioneered the influential role-taking theory of hypnotism was Theodore Sarbin. Sarbin argued that hypnotic responses were motivated attempts to fulfill the socially constructed roles of hypnotic subjects. This has led to the misconception that hypnotic subjects are simply "faking". However, Sarbin emphasised the difference between faking, in which there is little subjective identification with the role in question, and role-taking, in which the subject not only acts externally in accord with the role but also subjectively identifies with it to some degree, acting, thinking, and feeling "as if" they are hypnotised. Sarbin drew analogies between role-taking in hypnosis and role-taking in other areas such as method acting, mental illness, and shamanic possession, etc. This interpretation of hypnosis is particularly relevant to understanding stage hypnosis, in which there is clearly strong peer pressure to comply with a socially constructed role by performing accordingly on a theatrical stage.
Hence, the social constructionism and role-taking theory of hypnosis suggests that individuals are enacting (as opposed to merely playing) a role and that really there is no such thing as a hypnotic trance. A socially constructed relationship is built depending on how much rapport has been established between the "hypnotist" and the subject (see Hawthorne effect, Pygmalion effect, and placebo effect).
Psychologists such as Robert Baker and Graham Wagstaff claim that what we call hypnosis is actually a form of learned social behaviour, a complex hybrid of social compliance, relaxation, and suggestibility that can account for many esoteric behavioural manifestations.[158][non-primary source needed]
Cognitive-behavioural theory
[edit]Barber, Spanos, and Chaves (1974) proposed a nonstate "cognitive-behavioural" theory of hypnosis, similar in some respects to Sarbin's social role-taking theory and building upon the earlier research of Barber. On this model, hypnosis is explained as an extension of ordinary psychological processes like imagination, relaxation, expectation, social compliance, etc. In particular, Barber argued that responses to hypnotic suggestions were mediated by a "positive cognitive set" consisting of positive expectations, attitudes, and motivation. Daniel Araoz subsequently coined the acronym "TEAM" to symbolise the subject's orientation to hypnosis in terms of "trust", "expectation", "attitude", and "motivation".[38][non-primary source needed]
Barber et al. noted that similar factors appeared to mediate the response both to hypnotism and to cognitive behavioural therapy, in particular systematic desensitisation.[38] Hence, research and clinical practice inspired by their interpretation has led to growing interest in the relationship between hypnotherapy and cognitive behavioural therapy.[159]: 105 [90]
Information theory
[edit]An approach loosely based on information theory uses a brain-as-computer model. In adaptive systems, feedback increases the signal-to-noise ratio, which may converge towards a steady state. Increasing the signal-to-noise ratio enables messages to be more clearly received. The hypnotist's object is to use techniques to reduce interference and increase the receptability of specific messages (suggestions).[160]
Systems theory
[edit]Systems theory, in this context, may be regarded as an extension of Braid's original conceptualisation of hypnosis as involving "the brain and nervous system generally".[161]: 31 Systems theory considers the nervous system's organisation into interacting subsystems. Hypnotic phenomena thus involve not only increased or decreased activity of particular subsystems, but also their interaction. A central phenomenon in this regard is that of feedback loops, which suggest a mechanism for creating hypnotic phenomena.[162]
Societies
[edit]There is a huge range of societies in England who train individuals in hypnosis; however, one of the longest-standing organisations is the British Society of Clinical and Academic Hypnosis (BSCAH). It origins date back to 1952 when a group of dentists set up the 'British Society of Dental Hypnosis'. Shortly after, a group of sympathetic medical practitioners merged with this fast-evolving organisation to form 'The Dental and Medical Society for the Study of Hypnosis'; and, in 1968, after various statutory amendments had taken place, the 'British Society of Medical and Dental Hypnosis' (BSMDH) was formed. This society always had close links with the Royal Society of Medicine and many of its members were involved in setting up a hypnosis section at this centre of medical research in London. And, in 1978, under the presidency of David Waxman, the Section of Medical and Dental Hypnosis was formed. A second society, the British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis (BSECH), was also set up a year before, in 1977, and this consisted of psychologists, doctors and dentists with an interest in hypnosis theory and practice. In 2007, the two societies merged to form the 'British Society of Clinical and Academic Hypnosis' (BSCAH). This society only trains health professionals and is interested in furthering research into clinical hypnosis.
The American Society of Clinical Hypnosis (ASCH) is unique among organisations for professionals using hypnosis because members must be licensed healthcare workers with graduate degrees. As an interdisciplinary organisation, ASCH not only provides a classroom to teach professionals how to use hypnosis as a tool in their practice, it provides professionals with a community of experts from different disciplines. The ASCH's missions statement is to provide and encourage education programs to further, in every ethical way, the knowledge, understanding, and application of hypnosis in health care; to encourage research and scientific publication in the field of hypnosis; to promote the further recognition and acceptance of hypnosis as an important tool in clinical health care and focus for scientific research; to cooperate with other professional societies that share mutual goals, ethics and interests; and to provide a professional community for those clinicians and researchers who use hypnosis in their work. The ASCH also publishes the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis.
History
[edit]Hypnosis |
---|
The development of concepts, beliefs and practices related to hypnosis and hypnotherapy have been documented since prehistoric to modern times.
Although often viewed as one continuous history, the term hypnosis was coined in the 1880s in France, some twenty years after the death of James Braid, who had adopted the term hypnotism in 1841.
Braid adopted the term hypnotism (which specifically applied to the state of the subject, rather than techniques applied by the operator) to contrast his own, unique, subject-centred, approach with those of the operator-centred mesmerists who preceded him.See also
[edit]Historical figures
[edit]Modern researchers
[edit]Related subjects
[edit]- Covert hypnosis
- Guided meditation
- Highway hypnosis
- Hypnagogia
- Hypnoid state
- Hypnosis in popular culture
- Hypnosurgery
- Hypnotherapy
- Hypnotic Ego-Strengthening Procedure
- Ideomotor phenomenon
- List of ineffective cancer treatments
- Psychonautics
- Recreational hypnosis
- Royal Commission on Animal Magnetism
- Scientology and hypnosis
- Sedative (also known as sedative-hypnotic drug)
- The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology & Mesmerism, and Their Applications to Human Welfare
References
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Treatments such as relaxation techniques, chiropractic, therapeutic massage, special diets, megavitamins, acupuncture, naturopathy, homeopathy, hypnosis and psychoanalysis are often considered as pseudoscience or quackery with no credible or respectable place in medicine, because in evaluation they have not been shown to work
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- Yeates, L.B. (2013), James Braid: Surgeon, Gentleman Scientist, and Hypnotist, Ph.D. Dissertation, School of History and Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, January 2013.
- Yeates, L.B. (2014), "Hartland’s Legacy (II): The Ego-Strengthening Monologue", Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis, 36(1), pp. 19–36.
- Yeates, Lindsay B. (2016a), "Émile Coué and his Method (I): The Chemist of Thought and Human Action", Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis, Volume 38, No. 1, (Autumn 2016), pp. 3–27.
- Yeates, Lindsay B. (2016b), "Émile Coué and his Method (II): Hypnotism, Suggestion, Ego-Strengthening, and Autosuggestion", Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis, Volume 38, No.1, (Autumn 2016), pp. 28–54.
- Yeates, Lindsay B. (2016c), "Émile Coué and his Method (III): Every Day in Every Way", Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis, Volume 38, No. 1, (Autumn 2016), pp. 55–79.
- Yeates, L.B. (2018), "James Braid (II): Mesmerism, Braid’s Crucial Experiment, and Braid’s Discovery of Neuro-Hypnotism", Australian Journal of Clinical Hypnotherapy & Hypnosis, Vol. 40, No. 1, (Autumn 2018), pp. 40–92.
External links
[edit]- Media related to Hypnosis at Wikimedia Commons