enow.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: how does hypnosis affect consciousness and personality psychology
    • ED Hypnotherapy

      Transform Your Sexual Health

      With Hypnotherapy.

    • Weight Loss

      Overcome Weight Loss Challenges

      with the Help of Hypnotherapy

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hypnotic susceptibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotic_susceptibility

    Fantasizers tended to experience hypnosis as being much like other imaginative activities while dissociaters reported it was unlike anything they'd ever experienced. [8] Individuals with dissociative identity disorder have the highest hypnotizability of any clinical group, followed by those with post-traumatic stress disorder .

  3. Nicholas Spanos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_Spanos

    Spanos argued against Hilgard’s (and others') belief that hypnosis is an altered state of consciousness or a "special" or dissociated state of consciousness. Spanos worked for almost thirty years on this theory, first at the Medfield Foundation with Theodore X. Barber, John Chaves and others, and later at Carleton University in Canada. [4]

  4. Hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnosis

    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.

  5. Hypnotherapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotherapy

    Prepares client to enter hypnotic state by explaining how hypnosis works and what client will experience. Tests subject to determine degree of physical and emotional suggestibility. Induces hypnotic state in client, using individualized methods and techniques of hypnosis based on interpretation of test results and analysis of client's problem.

  6. Ernest Hilgard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ernest_Hilgard

    Divided consciousness is a term coined by Hilgard to define a psychological state in which one's consciousness is split into distinct components, possibly during hypnosis. The theory of a division of consciousness was touched upon by Carl Jung in 1935 when he stated, "The so-called unity of consciousness is an illusion ... we like to think that ...

  7. Suggestibility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suggestibility

    However, it is not clear or agreed what suggestibility (i.e., the factor on hypnosis) actually is. It is both the indisputable variable and the factor most difficult to measure or control. What has not been agreed on is whether suggestibility is: a permanent fixed detail of character or personality; a genetic or chemical psychiatric tendency;

  8. Unconscious mind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconscious_mind

    Phenomena related to semi-consciousness include awakening, implicit memory, subliminal messages, trances, hypnagogia and hypnosis. While sleep, sleepwalking, dreaming, delirium and comas may signal the presence of unconscious processes, these processes are seen as symptoms rather than the unconscious mind itself.

  9. Absorption (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absorption_(psychology)

    Absorption is strongly correlated with openness to experience. [6] Studies using factor analysis have suggested that the fantasy, aesthetics, and feelings facets of the NEO PI-R Openness to Experience scale are closely related to absorption and predict hypnotisability, whereas the remaining three facet scales of ideas, actions, and values are largely unrelated to these constructs. [5]

  1. Ad

    related to: how does hypnosis affect consciousness and personality psychology