Reporting biases in hypnosis: suggestion or compliance?
The tendency of highly hypnotizable participants to bias their retrospective perceptual reports in response to instructional demands was reexamined with the addition of low-hypnotizable control participants instructed to simulate hypnosis. Mean scores of high-hypnotizable participants and simulators did not differ, but the responses of simulators to the demand instruction was less variable than those of high-hypnotizable participants, and the shape of the response distribution was different. Unlike simulators, some high-hypnotizable participants who had reported changes in perception that were consistent with a hypnotic suggestion subsequently reported changes opposite to those suggested by a demand instruction. These data were interpreted as suggesting that the responses of high-hypnotizable participants to both the demand instruction and the preceding hypnotic suggestion were not entirely due to compliance.
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269-1020, USA.
J Abnorm Psychol. 1996 Feb;105(1):142-5
https://www.hypnosisresearchinstitute.org/trackback.cfm?885C84A6-C09F-2A3B-F6C862042665425E
There are no comments for this entry.
[Add Comment]