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Original Articles

Suggested Auditory and Visual Hallucinations in Task-Motivated and Hypnotic Subjects

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Pages 94-101 | Published online: 20 Sep 2011

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Read on this site (5)

Jean-Roch Laurence & Robert Nadon. (1986) Reports of Hypnotic Depth: Are they More than Mere Words?. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 34:3, pages 215-233.
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H. Lorraine Radtke & NicholasP. Spanos. (1982) The Effect of Rating Scale Descriptors on Hypnotic Depth Reports. The Journal of Psychology 111:2, pages 235-245.
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H. Lorraine Radtke & Nicholas P. Spanos. (1981) Was I Hypnotized?: A Social Psychological Analysis of Hypnotic Depth Reports. Psychiatry 44:4, pages 359-376.
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WilliamC. Coe, RichardL. St Jean & JerryM. Burger. (1980) Hypnosis and the enhancement of visual imagery. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 28:3, pages 225-243.
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M.L. Ryan & PeterW. Sheeha. (1977) Reality Testing in Hypnosis: Subjective Versus Objective Effects. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 25:1, pages 37-51.
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Articles from other publishers (67)

Amanda Anderson, Samantha Hartley & Sandra Bucci. (2021) A Systematic Review of the experimental induction of auditory perceptual experiences. Journal of Behavior Therapy and Experimental Psychiatry 71, pages 101635.
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Élisabeth Grebot & Benjamin Paty. (2005) Sous-capacités d'imagerie et suggestibilité. Le rôle de trois sous-capacités (vivacité, contrôle, stabilité) d'imagerie (visuelle, auditive et somesthésique) dans deux dimensions de la suggestibilité (idéationnelle et motrice non volontaire). Bulletin de psychologie Numéro 479:5, pages 549-565.
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Ágnes Ambró & Katalin Varga. (2002) Vizuális hallucinációtréning. Magyar Pszichológiai Szemle 57:2, pages 327-341.
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Robert G. Kunzendorf, Cindy Moran & Reid Gray. (2016) Personality Traits and Reality-Testing Abilities, Controlling for Vividness of Imagery. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 15:2, pages 113-131.
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Nicholas P. Spanos. 1991. Mental Imagery. Mental Imagery 79 88 .
Robert G. Kunzendorf. (2016) Self-Consciousness as the Monitoring of Cognitive States: A Theoretical Perspective. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 7:1, pages 3-22.
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Nicholas P. Spanos. (2010) More on the social psychology of hypnotic responding. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 489-502.
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Edwin A. Weinstein. (2010) Attentional capacities have neurological basis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 487-488.
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Graham F. Wagstaff. (2010) State versus nonstate paradigms of hypnosis: A real or a false dichotomy?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 486-487.
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Geoffrey Underwood. (2010) Using simulations to disprove hypnosis amnesia? Forget it. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 485-486.
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Dennis C. Turk & Thomas E. Rudy. (2010) Hypnotic behavior dissected or … pulling the wings off butterflies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 485-485.
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David Spiegel. (2010) Painstaking reminders of forgotten trance logic. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 484-485.
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Peter W. Sheehan. (2010) Theories of hypnosis – useful or necessary paths to truth?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 483-483.
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Richard St. Jean. (2010) Hypnosis: Artichoke or onion?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 482-482.
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John Sabini & Debra A. Kossman. (2010) What grandma thinks about hypnosis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 481-482.
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Ted L. Rosenthal. (2010) Hypnotic phenomena: Who really sees the emperor's new clothes?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 481-481.
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Robert Rosenthal. (2010) Nonsignificant relationships as scientific evidence. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 479-481.
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Campbell Perry & Jean-Roch Laurence. (2010) Social and psychological influences on hypnotic behavior. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 478-479.
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Martin T. Orne, David F. Dinges & Emily Carota Orne. (2010) Hypnotic experience: A cognitive social-psychological reality. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 477-478.
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Peter L. N. Naish. (2010) Hypnosis: Towards a rational explanation of irrational behaviour. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 476-477.
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Irving Kirsch. (2010) Role playing versus response expectancy as explanations of hypnotic behavior. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 475-476.
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John F. Kihlstrom. (2010) Strong inferences about hypnosis. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 474-475.
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Kenneth R. Graham. (2010) Explaining “virtuoso” hypnotic performance: Social psychology or experiential skill?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 473-474.
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Frederick J. Evans. (2010) Hypnosis and behavioral compliance: Is the cup half-empty or half-full?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 471-473.
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William E. EdmonstonJrJr. (2010) Hypnosis and social suggestibility. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 470-471.
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Nathan Brody. (2010) Cognitively induced analgesia and semantic dissociation. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 470-470.
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Patricia G. Bowers. (2010) Understanding reports of nonvolition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 469-470.
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John O. Beahrs. (2010) The “special-process” controversy: What is at issue?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 467-468.
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Nicholas P. Spanos. (2010) Hypnotic behavior: A social-psychological interpretation of amnesia, analgesia, and “trance logic”. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9:3, pages 449-467.
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Robert G. Kunzendorf. (2016) Hypnotic Hallucinations as “Unmonitored” Images: An Empirical Study. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 5:3, pages 255-270.
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Robert G. Kunzendorf. (2016) Repression as the Monitoring and Censoring of Images: An Empirical Study. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 5:1, pages 31-39.
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Nicholas P. Spanos, Michael Bridgeman, Henderikus J. Stam, Max Gwynn & Carol Lynne Saad. (2016) When Seeing is Not Believing: The Effects of Contextual Variables on the Reports of Hypnotic Hallucinators. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 2:3, pages 195-209.
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Nicholas P. Spanos & H. Lorraine Radtke. (2016) Hypnotic Visual Hallucinations as Imaginings: A Cognitive-Social Psychological Perspective. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 1:2, pages 147-170.
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Ralph Norman Haber. (2011) Eidetic imagery still lives, thanks to twenty-nine exorcists. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 619-629.
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Benjamin Wallace. (2011) Eidetic imagery need not haunt us: a supportive example for the use of phenomenological reports. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 618-619.
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Gudmund Smith. (2011) The need for strict differentiation between eidetics and noneidetics. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 617-618.
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Elsa M. Siipola. (2011) The search for neurological correlates of eidetic imagery. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 617-617.
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Michael H. Siegel. (2011) Eidetic imagery: where's the ghost?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 616-617.
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Peter W. Sheehan. (2011) Eidetic imagery: continuing to be an enigmatic phenomenon. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 615-616.
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Paul A. Roodin & Erol F. Giray. (2011) Eidetic imagery is not a ghost. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 614-615.
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Cynthia Roberts-Gray. (2011) The visualization continuum. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 614-614.
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Alan Richardson. (2011) Eidetic imagery, occipital EEG activity, and palinopsia. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 613-613.
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Ulric Neisser. (2011) Tracing eidetic imagery. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 612-613.
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John O. Merritt. (2011) None in a million: results of mass screening for eidetic ability using objective tests published in newspapers and magazines. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 612-612.
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David Marks. (2011) Eidetic imagery: Haber's ghost and Hatakeyama's ghoul. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 610-612.
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Martin S. Lindauer. (2011) Exorcising the ghosts in the study of eidetic imagery. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 609-610.
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Israel Lieblich. (2011) Eidetic imagery: do not use ghosts to hunt ghosts of the same species. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 608-609.
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Bela Julesz. (2011) Random-dot correlogram test for eidetic imagery. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 607-608.
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Julian Jaynes. (2011) Palaeolithic cave paintings as eidetic images. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 605-607.
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Ian M. L. Hunter. (2011) The easel procedure and eidetic characteristics. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 605-605.
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Dennis H. Holding. (2011) Does being “eidetic” matter?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 604-605.
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Klaus Heinerth. (2011) Autochthonous and phenomenal eidetic capacity. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 604-604.
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Alastair Hannay. (2011) Eidetic imagery: theories and ghosts. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 603-604.
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Charles J. Furst. (2011) The inside and outside of eidetic imagery. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 602-603.
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K. Anders Ericsson, William G. Chase & Herbert A. Simon. (2011) Phenomenological reports as data. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 601-602.
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Leonard W. Doob. (2011) The cross-cultural approach to eidetic images. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 600-601.
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Daniel C. Dennett. (2011) Breeding cognitive strategies. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 599-600.
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B. R. Bugelski. (2011) Eidetic possession: is exorcism necessary?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 598-599.
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Bruce Bridgeman. (2011) Toward a neurological theory of eidetic imagery. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 598-598.
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Jeanine Blanc-Garin. (2011) Is eidetic imagery still eidos?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 597-598.
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Theodore X. Barber. (2011) Eidetic imagery and the ability to hallucinate at will. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 596-597.
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R. Ashton. (2011) Eidetic imagery and stimulus control. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 596-596.
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Akhter Ahsen. (2011) Eidetics: redefinition of the ghost and its clinical application. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 594-596.
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Ralph Norman Haber. (2011) Twenty years of haunting eidetic imagery: where's the ghost?. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2:4, pages 583-594.
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Nicholas P. Spanos, David Mullens & Stephen M. Rivers. (1979) The effects of suggestion structure and hypnotic vs task-motivation instructions on response to hallucination suggestions. Journal of Research in Personality 13:1, pages 59-70.
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Kenneth R. Graham. (1977) PERCEPTUAL PROCESSES AND HYPNOSIS: SUPPORT FOR A COGNITIVE-STATE THEORY BASED ON LATERALITY. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 296:1 Conceptual an, pages 274-283.
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NICHOLAS P. SPANOS & THEODORE X. BARBER. 1976. 1 44 .

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