The Effects of Hypnotic Suggestion on Pain Report
- 1 April 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis
- Vol. 31 (4) , 221-230
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00029157.1989.10402776
Abstract
Forty-five highly susceptible volunteers rated a series of shocks using 32 pain descriptors. Descriptors were given numerical values using magnitude estimation procedures. We assigned the subjects to one of three conditions, analgesia suggestion, relaxation suggestion, or no suggestion. All subjects were administered the shocks and the suggestion appropriate to the group, in both the waking and hypnotic state. The results support the existence of two dimensions of pain which are differentially responsive to suggestion. Hypnotic-analgesia suggestion altered subjects' perceptions of the intensity without changing their perceptions of the unpleasantness of the shocks. Hypnotic-relaxation suggestion reduced the unpleasantness but not the perceived intensity of the stimuli. These findings imply that research into hypnotic pain relief is more easily interpreted if pain is viewed as multidimensional in nature.This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multidimensional scaling reveals two dimensions of thermal pain.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1986
- The Effects of Direct and Indirect Hypnotic Suggestions for Analgesia in High and Low Susceptible SubjectsAmerican Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 1985
- Hypnotic Age Regression and Cognitive Perceptual TasksAmerican Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 1979
- Narcotic Analgesia: Fentanyl Reduces the Intensity But Not the Unpleasantness of Painful Tooth Pulp SensationsScience, 1979
- The Barber Suggestibility Scale and the Creative Imagination Scale: Experimental and Clinical ApplicationsAmerican Journal of Clinical Hypnosis, 1978
- Validity and sensitivity of ratio scales of sensory and affective verbal pain descriptors: Manipulation of affect by diazepamPain, 1978
- Ratio scales of sensory and affective verbal pain descriptorsPain, 1978
- Pain tolerance in hypnotic analgesic and imagination states.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1972
- The Effects of “Hypnosis” on PainPsychosomatic Medicine, 1963
- THE POWERFUL PLACEBOJAMA, 1955