EEG sLORETA functional imaging during hypnotic arm levitation and voluntary arm lifting.
This study (N = 37 with high, medium, and low hypnotizables) evaluated depth reports and EEG activity during both voluntary and hypnotically induced left-arm lifting with sLORETA functional neuroimaging. The hypnotic condition was associated with higher activity in fast EEG frequencies in anterior regions and slow EEG frequencies in central-parietal regions, all left-sided. The voluntary condition was associated with fast frequency activity in right-hemisphere central-parietal regions and slow frequency activity in left anterior regions. Hypnotizability did not have a significant effect on EEG activity, but hypnotic depth correlated with left hemisphere increased anterior slow EEG and decreased central fast EEG activity. Hypnosis had a minimal effect on depth reports among lows, a moderate one among mediums, and a large one among highs. Because only left-arm data were available, the full role of the hemispheres remains to be clarified.
Int J Clin Exp Hypn. 2012;60(1):31-53. Cardeña E, Lehmann D, Faber PL, Jönsson P, Milz P, Pascual-Marqui RD, Kochi K. Department of Psychology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden. Etzel.Cardena@psychology.lu.se
https://www.hypnosisresearchinstitute.org/trackback.cfm?3AAAAFC5-982C-3749-F616D96F47E1EC69
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