Laterality, Hypnosis, and the Autokinetic Effect
- 1 October 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis
- Vol. 22 (2) , 79-84
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00029157.1979.10403202
Abstract
Studies of the relationship of hemispheric dominance to hypnotic susceptibility suggest a connection may exist between hypnosis and the nondominant hemisphere. In this experiment changes in lateral brain functioning were studied by means of the autokinetic effect. Scores for the proportion of perceived autokinetic movement to the left, assumed to reflect right hemisphere activation, were significantly greater for hypnotized, as opposed to nonhypnotized, undergraduate subjects. It is reasonable to assume there is a relationship between laterality and the autokinetic effect. Should this assumption receive further, independent support, our results would give support to the hypothesis that hypnosis involves greater activation of the right hemisphere for most subjects. The experiment also suggests that hypnosis may involve a cognitive change of state, and that hypnotic phenomena cannot be explained entirely in terms of motivational variables.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cerebral activation, as measured by subjects' lateral eye movements, is influenced by experimenter locationNeuropsychologia, 1975
- Handedness, sex, and eyedness as moderating variables in the relation between hypnotic susceptibility and functional brain asymmetry.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1974
- EEG Alpha: Lateral Asymmetry Related to Task, and HypnotizabilityPsychophysiology, 1974
- Autokinetic illusion: A systematic review of theories, measures, and independent variables.Psychological Bulletin, 1972
- Hypnotizability, Laterality of Eye-Movements and Functional Brain AsymmetryPerceptual and Motor Skills, 1969
- Direction of Autokinetic Movement as a Test of the "Sensory-Tonic-Field" Theory of PerceptionJournal of Personality, 1954