Definitions of hypnosis and hypnotizability and their relation to suggestion and suggestibility. A consensus statement.
Author
Summary, in English
Abstract in Undetermined
This article reports a consensus that was reached at an Advanced Workshop in Experimental Hypnosis held as part of the joint annual conference of the British Society of Medical and Dental Hypnosis (BSMDH) and the British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis (BSECH). The unanimous consensus was that conventional definitions of hypnosis
and hypnotizability are logically inconsistent and that at least one of them needed to be changed. Participants were divided between the alternatives of (1) broadening the operational definition of hypnosis so as to include responding to so-called waking suggestion and (2) limiting the term ‘hypnotizability’ to the effects of administering a hypnotic induction.
This article reports a consensus that was reached at an Advanced Workshop in Experimental Hypnosis held as part of the joint annual conference of the British Society of Medical and Dental Hypnosis (BSMDH) and the British Society of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis (BSECH). The unanimous consensus was that conventional definitions of hypnosis
and hypnotizability are logically inconsistent and that at least one of them needed to be changed. Participants were divided between the alternatives of (1) broadening the operational definition of hypnosis so as to include responding to so-called waking suggestion and (2) limiting the term ‘hypnotizability’ to the effects of administering a hypnotic induction.
Department/s
Publishing year
2011
Language
English
Pages
107-115
Publication/Series
Contemporary Hypnosis & Integrative Therapy
Volume
28
Document type
Journal article
Topic
- Psychology
Keywords
- Hypnosis
- definition
Status
Published
Research group
- CERCAP (Center for Research on Consciousness and Anomalous Psychology)