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Hypnosis: A Selected Bibliography[credits]
by Todd I. Stark
Index of bibliography sections- Selected Periodicals (14 entries)
- Edited Overviews of General Theories of Hypnosis (5 entries)
- Specific Topics Related to Research into Hypnosis.
- General single-author overviews, non-special-state views, social andexperimental views (10 entries)
- On state-specific theories, dissociation, and multiple personality (22entries)
- The Communications Perspective: Milton Erickson, Neurolinguistic Programming, etc.. (6 entries)
- Hypnosis, volition, mind control, abuse of hypnosis. Also legal aspectsand psychology of coercion (17 entries)
- The Human Mind in Science (Consciousness, Intentionality, the "UnconsciousMind" from diverse perspectives in science and philosophy of science) (23entries).
- Belief, Faith, and Knowledge. Interpreting Reality Under Extraordinary Circumstances; Social and Cultural Factors in Perception and Cognition(various viewpoints, ranging from biological and physiological to social andcultural) (26 entries).
- Psychosomatics, "Mind-Body" effects, Biofeedback, Misc. Physiological Effects in "Altered States." (19 entries)
- Hypnosis and Pain Control (8 entries)
- The Role of Imagination and Fantasy in Hypnosis and Altered States (11entries)
- The Reliability of Hypnotic Recall (8 entries)
* = particularly highly recommended.- A brief list of technical journals which frequently publish hypnosis research or have published articles of great historical importance:
- Journal of Abnormal Psychology
- International Journal of Experimental and Clinical Hypnosis
- Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
- Psychological Review
- Psychological Bulletin
- Behavioral and Brain Sciences
- American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis
- American Psychologist
- Science
- Psychosomatic Medicine
- Journal of Nervous and Mental Diseases
- Journal of Behavioral Medicine
- Archives of General Psychiatry
- Psychiatry
- Edited collections of diverse viewpoints.
- * Lynn, Stephen, and Judith Rhue (eds.),1991,"Theories of Hypnosis:Current Models and Perspectives," N.Y.:Guilford Press.
- Fromm, E. and R.E. Shor (eds.), 1979, "Hypnosis: Developments in Researchand New Perspectives," Chicago:Aldine.
- Tinterow, M.M. (ed.), 1855 (1970), "Foundations of Hypnosis," Springfield,Il.: Charles Thomas.
- Lecron, L.M. (ed.), 1954, "Experimental Hypnosis," Macmillan.
- Naish, P.L.N. (ed.), 1986, "What is hypnosis? Current Theories andResearch," Philadelphia: Open University Press.
- General overviews by single authors and important or useful articles addressing specific major issues related to hypnosis.
- General single-author overviews, non-special-state views, social andexperimental views.
- * Bowers, K.S., "Hypnosis for the Seriously Curious"
- Barber, Theodore X., Spanos, Nicholas P., and Chaves, John F. (1974)Hypnosis, Imagination, and Human Potentialities. Pergamon.
- Spanos, N.P. and J.F. Chaves (eds.), 1989, "Hypnosis: TheCognitive-Behavioral Perspective," N.Y., Prometheus Press.
- * Barber, T.X., 1969, "Hypnosis: A Scientific Approach," N.Y.: VanNostrand Reinhold.
- Spanos, N.P., 1986, "Hypnotic Behavior: A Social-Psychological interpretation of amnesia, analgesia, and 'trance logic,'" Behavioral andBrain Sciences, 9:449-467.
- Wagstaff, G.F., 1981, "Hypnosis, Compliance, and Belief," N.Y.:St. MartinsPress.
- Hull, Clark L., 1933, "Hypnosis and Suggestibility: An ExperimentalApproach," Appleton-Century-Crofts.
- Sarbin, Theodore and William Coe, 1972, "Hypnosis," N.Y.:Holt.
- Weitzenhoffer, Andre, 1953, "Hypnotism: An Objective Study in Suggestibility," N.Y.: Wiley.
- Bowers, K.S., and Thomas M. Davidson, 1991, "A Neodissociative Critique ofSpanos' Social Psychological Model of Hypnosis," in Lynn and Rhue, Theories of Hypnosis, 1991, N.Y.: Guilford Press, pp. 105-143.
- On state-specific theories, dissociation, and multiple personality.
- * Hilgard, Ernest R., 1977, "Divided Consciousness: Multiple Controls inHuman Thought and Action," John Wiley & Sons.
- Spanos, Nicholas P. (1986) "Hypnosis, Nonvolitional Responding andMultiple Personality: A Social Psychological Analysis," in Brendan A. Maherand Winifred B. Maher (editors), Progress in Experimental PersonalityResearch, vol. 14, pp. 1-62. Academic Press. (Critical of dissociationtheory).
- White, R.W., 1941, "A Preface to a Theory of Hypnotism," The Journal ofAbnormal and Social Psychology.
- White, R.W., and B.J. Shevach, 1942, "Hypnosis and the Concept ofDissociation," Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 37:309-328.
- Hilgard, E.R., 1991, "A Neodissociation Interpretation of Hypnosis," inLynn and Rhue (eds.), Theories of Hypnosis, N.Y.:Guilford Press, pp.83-104.
- Fischer, Roland, "State-Bound Knowledge," Aug. 1976, Psychology Today, 10, pp. 68-72.
- Prince, Morton, 1957, "The Dissociation of a Personality," N.Y.:MeridianBooks.
- Thigpen, Corbett and Hervey Cleckley, 1957, "The Three Faces of Eve,"N.Y.: McGraw Hill.
- Putnam, F., 1984, "The Psychophysiological Investigation of Multiple Personality Disorder," Psychiatric Clinics or North America, 7:31-39.
- Goleman, D., 1988, "Probing the Enigma of Multiple Personality," N.Y.Times, June 28, pp. C1,C13.
- Braun, B., 1983, "Psychophysiologic Phenomena in Multiple Personality andHypnosis," American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 26:124-135.
- Coons, P.M. et al., 1982, "EEG Studies of two multiple personalities and acontrol," Archives of General Psychiatry, July, 39:823.
- * Bliss, E., 1984, "Spontaneous Self-Hypnosis in Multiple Personality Disorder," Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 7:137.
- Humphrey, N. and D.C. Dennett, 1989, "Speaking for Ourselves: An Assessment of Multiple Personality Disorder," Raritan, 9: pp. 68-98.
- O'Regan, B. and T. Hurley, 1985, "Multiple Personality: Mirrors of a NewModel of Mind?," Investigations, Institute of Noetic Sciences.
- Ross, C.A. (1989) Multiple Personality Disorder: Diagnosis, Clinical Features, and Treatment. John Wiley and Sons
- Putnam, F.W.(1989) Diagnosis & Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder. Guilford Press.
- Kluft, R.P & Fine, C.G. (eds) (1993) Clinical Perspectives on MultiplePersonality Disorder. American Psychiatric Press.
- Lowenstein, R.J. (guest editor) The Psychiatric Clinics of North America,Special volume on multiple personality disorder, September, 1991 (Volume 14,No.3). W.B. Saunders Company.
- An exhaustive bibliography on multiple personality disorder was at onetime available from George Greaves, Ph.D., 529 Pharr Rd., Atlanta, GA 30305.
- * Beahrs, J.O,, (1982) "Unity and Multiplicity: Multilevel Consciousness of Self in Hypnosis, Psychiatric Disorder and Mental Health." New York:Brunner/Mazel.
- Braude, Stephen, (1991), "First Person Plural: Multiple Personality andthe Philosophy of Mind." London: Routledge.
- The Communications Perspective: Milton Erickson, NeurolinguisticProgramming, etc..
- * Rossi, E. (ed.), 1980, "The Collected Papers of Milton H. Erickson on hypnosis", (4 vols), N.Y.: Irvington.
- Zeig, Jeffrey and Peter Rennick, 1991, "Ericksonian Hypnotherapy: ACommunications Approach to Hypnosis," in Lynn and Rhue (eds),Theories of Hypnosis, N.Y.:Guilford Press.
- Havens, R.A. (ed.), 1992, "The Wisdom of Milton H. Erickson", (2 vols),N.Y., Irvington
- Bandler, RIchard and John Grinder, (Judith Delozier), 1975/1977 (2 vols),"Patterns of the hypnotic techniques of Milton H. Erickson, M.D." Cupertino,Ca.: Meta Publications
- Grinder, John and Richard Bandler (ed. Connirae Andreas), 1981,"Trance-Formations: Neurolinguistic Programming and the Structure ofHypnosis," Utah:Real People Press.
- Moine, Donald and Kenneth Lloyd, 1990, "Unlimited Selling Power: How toMaster Hypnotic Selling Skills," N.J.:Prentice Hall.
- Hypnosis, volition, mind control, abuse of hypnosis. Also legal aspectsand psychology of coercion.
- Barber, Theodore X. (1961) "Antisocial and Criminal Acts Induced by Hypnosis: A Review of Experimental and Clinical Findings," Archives of GeneralPsychiatry 5:301-312.
- Hoencamp, Erik (1990) "Sexual Abuse and the Abuse of Hypnosis in theTherapeutic Relationship," International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 38:283-297.
- Katz, Leo (1987) Bad Acts and Guilty Minds: Conundrums of the CriminalLaw. University of Chicago Press.
- * Levitt, Eugene E. (1977) "Research Strategies in Evaluating the CoercivePower of Hypnosis," Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 296:86-89.
- Levitt, Eugene E., Baker, Elgan L., Jr., and Fish, Ronald C. (1990) "Some Conditions of Compliance and Resistance Among Hypnotic Subjects," American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis 32(April):225-236.
- Marks, John (1979) The Search for the "Manchurian Candidate": The CIA and Mind Control. Times Books.
- Milgram, Stanley (1974) Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View.Harper & Row.
- Orne, Martin T. (1972) "Can A Hypnotized Subject Be Compelled To Carry OutOtherwise Unacceptable Behavior? A Discussion," International Journal ofClinical Hypnosis 20:101-117.
- Orne, Martin T. and Evans, Frederick J. (1965) "Social Control in the Psychological Experiment: Antisocial Behavior and Hypnosis," Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 1:189-200.
- Rowland, Lloyd W. (1939) "Will Hypnotized Persons Try To Harm Themselves or Others?" Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology 34:114-117.
- Thomas, Gordon (1989) Journey into Madness: The True Story of Secret CIAMind Control and Medical Abuse. N.Y.: Bantam.
- Erickson, Milton H., 1939, "An Experimental Investigation into thePossible Anti-Social Use of Hypnosis," Psychiatry, 2, 391-414.
- * Orne, M. T., 1961, chapter on hypnosis in Biderman and Zimmer, (eds),The Manipulation of Human Behavior, pp. 169-215.
- * Wells, W.R., 1941, "Experiments in the Hypnotic Production of Crime,"Journal of Psychology, 11:63-102.
- Brenman, M., 1942, "Experiments in the Hypnotic Production of Anti-Socialand Self-Injurious Behavior," Psychiatry, 5:49-61.
- Gross, Michael, 1991, "The Eyes Have It," The Fortean Times, #58,July, 1991).
- Rosenbaum, M. (ed.), 1983, Compliance Behavior, Free Press.
- The Human Mind in Science (Consciousness, Intentionality, the "Unconscious Mind" from diverse perspectives in science and philosophy ofscience).
- * Bowers, K.S. and D. Meichenbaum (eds), 1984, The UnconsciousReconsidered, N.Y.:Wiley.
- * Bowers, K.S., 1990, "Unconscious influences and hypnosis," in J.L.Singer (ed), Repression and Dissociation: Defense Mechanisms andPersonality Styles (pp. 143-179), Chicageo:Univ of Chicago Press.
- * R.L. Gregory, 1981, Mind in Science, Cambridge: Cambridge Univ.Press.
- Tart, Charles T., 1975, States of Consciousness, N.Y.:Dutton
- McGaugh, J.L., G. Lynch, and N.M. Weinberger (eds), 1993, TheNeurobiology of Learning and Memory, N.Y., Guilford Press.
- * Ornstein, Robert E. (ed), 1968, The Nature of Human Consciousness: A Book of Readings, San Francisco:W.H. Freeman.
- * Davidson, J.M. and Richard J. Davidson (eds), 1980, The Psychobiology of Consciousness, N.Y.:Plenum Press.
- Erdelyi, M.H., 1985, "Psychoanalysis: Freud's Cognitive Psychology,"N.Y.:Freeman.
- Marcel, A., and E. Bisiach (eds), 1988, Consciousness in ContemporaryScience, Oxford:Clarendon.
- Edelman, G.M., 1989, The Remembered Present: A Biological Theory ofConsciousness, N.Y., Basic Books.
- Dennett, Daniel C., 1991, Consciousness Explained, Little, Brown.
- Flanagan, O.J. Jr., 1991, (2nd ed), The Science of the Mind,Cambridge, Mass., Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Bartless, F.C., 1964, Remembering: A Study in Experimental and Social Psychology, Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Montefiore, A. and D. Noble (eds), 1989, "Goals, Own Goals, and No Goals:A Debate on Goal-Directed and Intentional Behavior," London: Unwin Hyman
- Libet, B., 1965, "Cortical Activation in Conscious and Unconscious Experience," Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, 9, pp. 77-86.
- Libet, B., 1985, "Unconscious Cerebral Initiative and the Role ofConscious Will in Voluntary Action," Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 8,pp. 529-566.
- Globus, Gordon G., Grover Maxwell, and Irving Savodnik (eds), 1976,Consciousness and the Brain: A Scientific and Philosophical Inquiry,N.Y.: Plenum Press.
- Davidson, Davidson, Schwartz, Shapiro, (eds), 1986, Consciousness andSelf-Regulation, N.Y.: Plenum Press
- * Ellenberger, H., 1970, "The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychology," N.Y.: Basic Books.
- * Kihlstrom, J.F., 1987, "The Cognitive Unconscious," Science, 237,1445-1452.
- Weisenkrantz, L. (ed), 1988, Thought Without Language, Oxford:Clarendon.
- Brentano, F., 1973, (ed. O. Kraus and L.C. McAlister, trans. A. Rancurelloet al) "Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint," Highlands, N.J.: Humanities.
- * Tart, Charles (ed.), 1972. Altered States of Consciousness,N.Y.:Doubleday/Anchor
- Belief, Faith, and Knowledge. Interpreting Reality Under Extraordinary Circumstances, Social and Cultural Factors in Cognition and Perception (various viewpoints, ranging from biological and physiological to social andcultural)
- Sargant, William, 1957, Battle for the Mind, N.Y.: Harper and Row.
- Sargant, William, 1969, "The Physiology of Faith," British Journal of Psychiatry, 115, pp. 505-518.
- Sargant, William, 1975, The Mind Possessed, Baltimore:Penguin.
- Ebon, Martin, (Jan-Feb, 1977), "The Occult Temptation," TheHumanist, 37, pp. 27-30.
- * Luhrmann, T.M., 1989, "Persuasions of the Witch's Craft," CambridgeMass.: Harvard Univ. Press.
- Evans, Christopher, 1973, Cults of Unreason, N.Y.: Farrar.
- Jahoda, Gustav, 1969, The Psychology of Superstition, Baltimore:Penguin
- Berger, P. and T. Luckman, 1967, The Social Construction ofReality, N.Y.:Anchor.
- Abelson, R.P. et al (eds), 1968, Theories of Cognitive Consistency: A Sourcebook, Chicago: Rand McNally.
- D'Andrade, R.G., 1981, "The Cultural Part of Cognition," CognitiveScience, 5, pp. 179-195.
- Eister, A.W., 1972, "Outline of a Structural Theory of Cults," Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 11(4), pp. 319-333.
- Geertz, C., 1983, Local Knowledge, N.Y.:Basic Books.
- Gellner, E., 1974, Legitimation of Belief, Cambridge:Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Griffiths, A.P. (ed), 1967, Knowledge and Belief, Oxford: OxfordUniv. Press.
- Kahneman, D., P, Slovic, A. Tverski (eds), 1982, "Judgement Under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases," Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
- * Ortony, A. (ed), 1979, Metaphor and Thought, Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press.
- * Galanter, Marc. 1989, Cults: Faith, Healing, and Coercion,Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press.
- Waton, Lawrence and Doxon Guthrie, 1972, "A New Approach to Psychopathology: The Influence of Cultural Meanings on Altered States ofConsciousness," Journal for the Study of Consciousness, 5, pp. 26-34.
- Hollis, M. and S. Lukes (eds), 1982, Rationality and Relativism,Oxford: Blackwell.
- Sapir, J.D. and J.C. Crocker (eds), 1977, The Social Use ofMetaphor, Philadelphia:U of P Press.
- * Foucault, M., 1970, The Order of Things: An Archaeology of the Human Sciences, Vintage/Random House.
- * James, William, (1958), The Varieties of Religious Experience,N.Y.: New American Library/Mentor.
- Underhill, Evelyn, (1972), Mysticism, N.Y.:World/Meridian.
- Zusne, Leonard and Warren Jones, 1982, Anomalistic Psychology,Hillsdale, N.J.:Erlbaum.
- Perceptual anomalies and unusual experiences
- Hilgard, E., 1965, Hypnosis section of Vol. 16 of the Annual Review ofPsychology, pp. 157-180.
- Hilgard, E., 1975, Hypnosis section of Vol. 26 of the Annual Review ofPsychology, pp. 19-44.
- Kihlstrom, J.R. 1985, Hypnosis section of Vol. 36 of the Annual Reviewof Psychology, pp. 385-418.
- Walker, Garrett, and Wallace, 1976, "Restoration of Eidetic Imagery viaHypnotic Age Regression: A Preliminary Report," Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 85, 335-337.
- Wallace, 1978, "Restoration of Eidetic Imagery via Hypnotic AgeRegression: More Evidence," Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 87,673-675.
- Gray, Cynthia, and Kent Gummerman, 1975, "The Enigmantic Eidetic Image,"Psychological Bulletin, 82, pp. 383-407.
- Heron, Woodburn, W.H. Bexton, and Donald Hebb, 1953, "Cognitive Effects of a Decreased Variation in the Sensory Environment," American Psychologist, 8, p. 366.
- Purdy, D.M., 1936, "Eidetic Imagery and the Plasticity of Perception,"Journal of General Psychology, 15.
- Rosett, Joshua, 1939, "The Mechanism of Thought, Imagery, and Hallucination," N.Y.:Columbia Univ Press
- Zubek, John, (ed), 1969, Sensory Deprivation, N.Y.:Appleton
- * Blackmore, Susan, 1983, Beyond the Body, Vermont:David
- Gabbard, Glen, and Stuart Twemlow, 1984, With The Eyes of the Mind,N.Y., Praeger.
- Irwin, Harvey, 1985, Flight of Mind: A Psychology Study of the Out of Body Experience, N.J.:Scarecrow Press
- Black, Perry (ed), 1970, Physiological Correlates of Emotion,N.Y.:Academic Press, pp. 229-243 ("The perception and labelling of bodilychanges as determinants of emotional behavior")
- Merleau-Ponty, M., 1962, The Phenomenology of Perception, trans. C. Smith, Routledge and Kegan Paul.
- Spiegel, D. et al, 1989, "Hypnotic Alteration of Soma to sensory Perception," American Journal of Psychiatry, 146:752.
- Lukianowicz, N., 1958, "Autoscopic Phenomena," Archives of Neurology and Psychiatry, 80, pp. 199-220.
- * Ellson, Douglas, 1941, "Hallucinations Produced by Sensory Conditioning," Journal of Experimental Psychology, 28, pp. 1-20.
- * Spanos, Nicholas P. (1986) "Hypnotic Behavior: A Social-Psychological Interpretation of Amnesia, Analgesia, and 'Trance Logic'," Behavioral andBrain Sciences 9:449-502.
- * Spiegel, Cutcomb, Ren, and Pribram, (1985) "Hypnotic HallucinationAlters Evoked Potentials." Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 94:249-255.
- * Spanos, Nicholas P., H.P. de Groot, D.K. Tiller, J.R. Weekes, and L.D.Bertrand, "'Trance logic' duality and hidden observer responding in hypnotic,imagination control, and simulating subjects," Journal of AbnormalPsychology, 94(1985):611-623.
- W. Wells, 1940, "The extent and duration of post-hypnotic amnesia,"Journal of Psychology, 9:137-151.
- Edwards, 1963, "Duration of post-hypnotic effect," British Journal ofPsychiatry, 109: 259-266.
- Dixon, Norman, 1981, Preconscious Processing, Wiley.
- Bryant and McConkey, 1989, "Hypnotic Blindness: A Behavioral and Experimental Analysis," Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 98, 71-77, and also p. 443-447, "Hypnotic Blindness, Awareness, and Attribution."
- Alvarado, Carlos S., 1992, The Psychological Approach to Out-of-BodyExperiences: A Review of Early and Modern Developments. JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 126, 237-250.
- Borgeat F. Goulet J. Psychophysiological changes following auditorysubliminal suggestions for activation and deactivation. Perceptual &Motor Skills. 56(3):759-66, 1983 Jun.
- Schuyler BA. Coe WC. A physiological investigation of volitional and nonvolitional experience during posthypnotic amnesia. Journal of Personality& Social Psychology. 40(6):1160-9, 1981 Jun.
- Barabasz AF. Gregson RA. Antarctic wintering--over, suggestion andtransient olfactory stimulation: EEG evoked potential and electrodermalresponses. Biological Psychology. 9(4):285-95, 1979 Dec.
- Aladzhalova NA. Rozhnov VE. Kamenetskii SL. Human hypnosis and super-slow electrical activity of the brain. [RUSSIAN] Zhurnal NevropatologiiI Psikhiatrii Imeni S - S - Korsakova. 76(5):704-9, 1976.
- Psychosomatics, "Mind-Body" effects, Biofeedback, Misc. Physiological Effects in "Altered States," physiological correlates of hypnotic effects.
- Bass, M.J., 1931, "Differentiation of the hypnotic trance from normalsleep," Journal of Experimental Psychology, 14:382-399.
- Harary, Keith, 1992, "The trouble with HYPNOSIS. Whose power is it,anyway?" March/April Psychology Today.
- June 1989 issue of Gastroenterology, "Hypnosis and the Relaxation Response," and "Modulation of gastric acid secretion by hypnosis"
- * Barber, T.X., 1961, "Physiological effects of 'hypnosis,'Psychological Bulletin, 58: 390-419.
- * Barber, T.X., 1965, "Physiological effects of 'hypnotic suggestions': acritical review of recent research (1960-1964)," PsychologicalBulletin, 63: 201-222.
- Ulman + Dudek, 1960, "On the Psyche and Warts: II. Hypnotic Suggestion andWarts," Psychosomatic Medicine, 22:68-76.
- Rulison, 1942, "Warts, A Statistical Study of Nine Hundred and Twenty One Cases," Archives of Dermatology and Syphilology, 46:66-81.
- * Johnson, R.F.Q., and T.X. Barber, 1976, "Hypnotic Suggestions forBlister Formation: Subjective and Physiological Effects," American Journalof Clinical Hypnosis, 18:172-182.
- Ulman, M., 1947, "Herpes Simplex and Second Degree Burn Induced UnderHypnosis," American Journal of Psychiatry, 103:828-830.
- Mandler, G., 1984, Mind and Body: Psychology of Emotion and Stress,N.Y.:Norton.
- * Ader, Robert (ed.), 1981, Psychoneuroimmunology, SanDiego:Academy Press.
- Locke, Steven and Douglas Colligan, 1986, The Healer Within,N.Y.:Dutton.
- * Basmajian, J.V., 1963, "Control and Training of Individual Motor Units,"Science, 141, pp. 440-441.
- Brown, Barbara, 1974, "New Mind, New Body," N.Y.:Harper
- * Green, Elmer, Alyce Green, and E. Dale Walters, 1970, "Voluntary Controlof Internal States," Journal of Transpersonal Psychology, 2, pp. 1-26.
- * Kamiya, Joe, 1972, "Operant Control of the EEG Alpha Rhythm and Some ofits Reported Effects on Consciousness," in Charles Tart (ed.) Altered States of Consciousness, N.Y.:Doubleday/Anchor, pp. 519-529.
- Lewis, Howard amd Martha Lewis, 1975, Psychosomatics, N.Y.,Pinnacle Books.
- Abse, D. Wilfred, 1966, "Hysteria and Related Mental Disorders,"Bristol:John Wright.
- Fields, Howard, (Nov. 1978), "Secrets of the Placebo," PsychologyToday, 12, 172.
- O'Connell DN. Orne MT. Endosomatic electrodermal correlates of hypnotic depth and susceptibility. Journal of Psychiatric Research. 6(1):1-12,1968Jun.
- Serafetinides EA. Electrophysiological responses to sensory stimulationunder hypnosis. American Journal of Psychiatry. 125(1):112-3, 1968 Jul.
- Pessin M. Plapp JM. Stern JA. Effects of hypnosis induction andattention direction on electrodermal responses. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis. 10(3):198-206, 1968 Jan.
- Hoenig J. Reed GF. The objective assessment of desensitization. BritishJournal of Psychiatry. 112(493):1279-83, 1966 Dec.
- Brende JO. Electrodermal responses in post-traumatic syndromes. A pilotstudy of cerebral hemisphere functioning in Vietnam veterans. Journal ofNervous & Mental Disease. 170(6):352-61, 1982 Jun.
- Morse DR. Martin JS. Furst ML. Dubin LL. A physiological and subjective evaluation of meditation, hypnosis, and relaxation. Journal Psychosomatic Medicine. 39(5):304-24, 1977 Sep-Oct.
- Aladzhalova NA. Rozhnov VE. Kamenetskii SL. Hypnosis in man and veryslow brain electrical activity. Neuroscience & Behavioral Physiology.9(3):252-6, 1978 Jul-Sep.
- Tebecis AK. Provins KA. Further studies of physiological concomitants of hypnosis: skin temperature, heart rate and skin resistance. Biological Psychology. 4(4):249-58, 1976 Dec.
- Hypnosis and Pain Control
- Hilgard, Hilgard, Macdonald, Morgan, and Johnson, 1978, "The reality of hypnotic analgesia: a comparison of highly hypnotizables with simulators."
- Hilgard and Hilgard, 1983, "Hypnosis in the relief of pain" (book)
- Barber, J. and D. Mayer, 1977, 'Evaluation of the efficacy and neuralmechanism of a hypnotic analgesia procedure in experimental and clinicaldental pain,' Pain, 4,41-48.
- Stern, Brown, Ulett, and Sletten, 1977, 'A comparison of hypnosis, acupuncture, morphine, Valium, aspirin, and placebo in the management ofexperimentally induced pain,' Annals of the New York Academy ofSciences, 296, 175-193.
- Van Gorp, Meyer, and Dunbar, 1985, 'The efficacy of direct versus indirecthypnotic induction techniques on reduction of experimental pain,'International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 33,319-328.
- Tripp and Marks, 1986, 'Hypnosis, relaxation, and analgesia suggestionsfor the reduction of reported pain in high-and low-suggestible subjects,'Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 33, 319-328.
- Crasilneck, H.B. et al., 1955, "Use of hypnosis in the management ofpatients with burns," Journal of the American Medical Association, 158:103-106.
- Turk, D., D.H. Meichenbaum, and M. Genest, (1983), Pain and behavioralmedicine: a cognitive-behavioral perspective, New York: Guilford Press.
- Larbig W. Elbert T. Lutzenberger W. Rockstroh B. Schnerr G. BirbaumerN. EEG and slow brain potentials during anticipation and control of painfulstimulation. Electroencephalography & Clinical Neurophysiology. 53(3):298-309, 1982 Mar.
- Lloyd MA. Appel JB. Signal detection theory and the psychophysics ofpain: an introduction and review. Psychosomatic Medicine. 38(2):79-94, 1976Mar-Apr.
- The Role of Imagination and Fantasy in Hypnosis and Altered States
- * Wilson, S. and T.X. Barber, 1982,"The Fantasy Prone Personality:Implications for understanding imagery, hypnosis, and parapsychologicalphenomena," Imagery, Current Theory, Research, and Application, N.Y.John Wiley and Sons, A.A. Sheikh (ed).
- Yuille, J.C. (ed), 1983, Imagery, Memory, and Cognition, Hillsdale,N.J.:Lawrence Erlbaum.
- Sheikh, A.A., and T.T. Shaffer (eds.), 1979, The Potential of Fantasyand Imagination, N.Y.: Brandon House.
- Sheehan. P.W. (ed), 1972, The Function and Nature of Imagery,N.Y.:Academic Press.
- Block, N. (ed.), 1981, Imagery, Cambridge: MIT Press.
- Barber, T.X., 1970, LSD, Marihuana, Yoga, and Hypnosis, Chicago:Aldine.
- Klinger, E. (ed), 1981, Imagery: Concepts, Results, and Applications, Plenum. (Wilson and Barber, "Vivid Fantasy andHallucinatory Abilities in the Life Histories of Excellent Hypnotic Subjects('Somnambules'): Preliminary Report with Female Subjects.")
- Diamond, M., 1974, "Modification of hypnotizability: A review,"Psychological Bulletin, 81: 180-198.
- Wicramasekera, I., 1976, Biofeedback, Behavior Therapy, and Hypnosis, Nelson Hall.
- Gorassini and Spanos, 1986, "A sociocognitive skills approach to thesuccesful modification of hypnotic susceptibility," Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50: 1004-1012. (A non-imagination alernative view of hypnotic suggestibility).
- Lynn, S. and J. Rhue, 1988, "Fantasy Proneness," AmericanPsychologist, 45:1-43.
- Barabasz AF. Restricted environmental stimulation and the enhancement of hypnotizability: pain, EEG alpha, skin conductance and temperature responses.International Journal of Clinical & Experimental Hypnosis. 30(2):147-66,1982 Apr.
- Holroyd JC. Nuechterlein KH. Shapiro D. Ward F. Individual differencesin hypnotizability and effectiveness of hypnosis or biofeedback. InternationalJournal of Clinical & Experimental Hypnosis. 30(1):45-65, 1982 Jan.
- Kunzendorf, Robert. Hypnotizability: correlations with daydreaming andsleeping. Psychological Reports v. 53 (Oct. '83) p. 406
- * Kunzendorf, Robert (ed), 1990, "The Psychophysiology of Mental Imagery",Amityville, NY: Baywood Publishing. Especially the chapter by Spiegel onhypnotic hallucination.
- The Reliability of Hypnotic Recall
- Loftus and Loftus, (May, 1980), "On the permanence of stored informationin the human brain," American Psychologist, 35(5):409-420
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Article by Todd I. Stark
From the FAQ regarding the scientific study of hypnosis by Todd I. Stark
© 1993.
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