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Dissociative tendencies and individual differences in high hypnotic suggestibility

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Pages 113-135 | Received 22 Feb 2010, Published online: 17 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

Introduction. Inconsistencies in the relationship between dissociation and hypnosis may result from heterogeneity among highly suggestible individuals, in particular the existence of distinct highly suggestible subtypes that are of relevance to models of psychopathology and the consequences of trauma. This study contrasted highly suggestible subtypes high or low in dissociation on measures of hypnotic responding, cognitive functioning, and psychopathology.

Methods. Twenty-one low suggestible (LS), 19 low dissociative highly suggestible (LDHS), and 11 high dissociative highly suggestible (HDHS) participants were administered hypnotic suggestibility scales and completed measures of free recall, working memory capacity, imagery, fantasy-proneness, psychopathology, and exposure to stressful life events.

Results. HDHS participants were more responsive to positive and negative hallucination suggestions and experienced greater involuntariness during hypnotic responding. They also exhibited impaired working memory capacity, elevated pathological fantasy and dissociative symptomatology, and a greater incidence of exposure to stressful life events. In contrast, LDHS participants displayed superior object visual imagery.

Conclusions. These results provide further evidence for two highly suggestible subtypes: a dissociative subtype characterised by deficits in executive functioning and a predisposition to psychopathology, and a subtype that exhibits superior imagery and no observable deficits in functioning.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by Research Bursary 54/06 from the Bial Foundation to DBT and EC and the David Caul Graduate Research Award from the International Society for the Study of Dissociation to DBT. The research assistance of Christian G. Jensen and Tina Koch is gratefully acknowledged.

Notes

1This criterion was established prior to data collection on the basis of the scale norms (Weitzenhoffer & Hilgard, 1967) and our previous use of the scales (e.g., Cardeña, Citation2005).

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