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Nuances and Uncertainties Regarding Hypnotic Inductions: : Toward a Theoretically Informed Praxis

Author

Summary, in English

Although most definitions of hypnosis consider inductions as the initial stage in a hypnosis protocol, knowledge of inductions remains poor and uninformed by recent developments in theory and research. It is frequently argued that inductions play a critical role in hypnotic responding or, by contrast, are largely interchangeable and unimportant. Drawing on the literature on suggestibility, spontaneous phenomenology, neurophysiology, and cognition, this article argues that the value of
inductions, as well as the potential value of inductions, is more nuanced and uncertain. Certain components of standard inductions appear to be efficacious in enhancing suggestibility, whereas others do not have any clear benefits. The impact of inductions on suggestibility seems to vary across suggestions and modes of assessment with the sources of this variability being unknown. Considering these effects, and the broader impact of inductions on spontaneous conscious states
and cognition, through the lens of heterogeneity in high hypnotic suggestibility and componential models of hypnotic suggestibility may offer novel research avenues in this area. The article concludes by arguing for the practical and theory-driven optimization of inductions.

Publishing year

2016-09-01

Language

English

Pages

155-174

Publication/Series

American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis

Volume

59

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

American Society of Clinical Hypnosis

Topic

  • Psychology

Keywords

  • hypnosis
  • hypnotizability
  • induction
  • measurement
  • neurophenomenology

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0002-9157