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    Hypnosis

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    Author
    Heap, Michael
    Keyword
    Hypnosis
    Date
    2007
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    DOI
    10.1017/CBO9780511543579.079
    Publisher's URL
    http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521605106
    Abstract
    The nature of hypnosis Hypnosis is a complex psychological phenomenon. It is an interaction between two people, one of whom is identified as the ‘hypnotist’, the other as the ‘hypnotic subject’ (or there may be a group of subjects). In practice it involves a variety of psychological processes and phenomena: selective attention, usually (though not necessarily) relaxation, imagination, expectation, role-playing, compliance and attribution. The significance of each of these ingredients varies according to the situation. There are, however, two additional phenomena related to the above which are central to a discussion of hypnosis, namely suggestion and trance. Suggestion Suggestions are communications conveyed verbally by the hypnotist that direct the subject’s imagination in such a way as to elicit intended alterations in the way he or she is behaving, thinking, perceiving or feeling. The word ‘intended’ is meant to convey a key defining property, which is that these changes approximate those that would occur were the imagined events to be taking place in reality. (The reader may also find that the term ‘suggestion’ is often used to denote the process of responding by the subject to the communication.) A corollary of the above is that the subjective experience of responding to suggestion has an automatic or involuntary quality. For example, the hypnotist may ask the subject to concentrate on his or her arm; suggestions are then conveyed that the arm is becoming very light and beginning to rise in the air. © Cambridge University Press 2007.
    Citation
    Heap, M. (2007). Hypnosis. In: Ayers, S., Baum, A., McManus, C., Newman, S. & Wallston, K. (eds.) Cambridge handbook of psychology, health and medicine. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 359-362.
    Type
    Book chapter
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12904/9025
    Note
    Available in the Library: https://nottshc.koha-ptfs.co.uk/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=70423
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    NottsHC Mental Health and Behavioural Conditions: General and Other

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