147
Views
35
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Original Articles

Hypnotic Hypermnesia: The Empty Set of Hypermnesia

Pages 379-390 | Received 16 Apr 1993, Published online: 31 Jan 2008

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (9)

Michelle N. Dasse, Gary R. Elkins & Charles A. Weaver$suffix/text()$suffix/text(). (2015) Hypnotizability, Not Suggestion, Influences False Memory Development. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 63:1, pages 110-128.
Read now
Serena Mastroberardino, Valeria Natali & Ingrid Candel. (2012) The effect of eye closure on children's eyewitness testimonies. Psychology, Crime & Law 18:3, pages 245-257.
Read now
Graham F. Wagstaff, Jacqueline M. Wheatcroft & Anna Christina Jones. (2011) Are High Hypnotizables Especially Vulnerable to False Memory Effects? A Sociocognitive Perspective . International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 59:3, pages 310-326.
Read now
Graham F. Wagstaff, Jacqueline M. Wheatcroft, Andrea M. Caddick, Lara J. Kirby & Elizabeth Lamont. (2011) Enhancing Witness Memory With Techniques Derived From Hypnotic Investigative Interviewing: Focused Meditation, Eye-Closure, and Context Reinstatement . International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 59:2, pages 146-164.
Read now
ALAN SCOBORIA , GIULIANA MAZZONI & IRVING KIRSCH. (2006) Effects of Misleading Questions and Hypnotic Memory Suggestion on Memory Reports: A Signal-Detection Analysis . International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 54:3, pages 340-359.
Read now
James B. Worthen & Virginia V. Wood. (2001) Memory discrimination for self-performed and imagined acts: Bizarreness effects in false recognition. The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A 54:1, pages 49-67.
Read now
MarkR. Kebbell, Rebecca Milne & GrahamF. Wagstaff. (1999) The cognitive interview: A survey of its forensic effectiveness. Psychology, Crime & Law 5:1-2, pages 101-115.
Read now
RichardA. Bryant, AmandaJ. Barnier, David Mallard & Rachel Tibbits. (1999) Posthypnotic amnesia for material learned before hypnosis. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 47:1, pages 46-64.
Read now
MarkR. Kebbell, GrahamF. Wagstaff & Dawn Preece. (1998) The effect of belief that testimony was elicited with a cognitive interview on jurors' judgments of guilt. Psychology, Crime & Law 4:1, pages 17-25.
Read now

Articles from other publishers (26)

Achyut Agrawal & Yashasvi Agarwal. (2022) Is There Any Formula to Dream? Your Question Answered. International Journal of Advanced Research in Science, Communication and Technology, pages 132-139.
Crossref
B. Palfi, B.A. Parris, N. McLatchie, Z. Kekecs & Z. Dienes. (2021) Can unconscious intentions be more effective than conscious intentions? Test of the role of metacognition in hypnotic response. Cortex 135, pages 219-239.
Crossref
Daniel T. Willingham & Cedar Riener. 2019. Cognition. Cognition.
Adrian Furnham & Dimitrios Tsivrikos. 2016. All in the Mind. All in the Mind 235 242 .
Burkhard Peter. 2015. Hypnose in Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik und Medizin. Hypnose in Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik und Medizin 273 283 .
Arianna Palmieri, Vincenzo Calvo, Johann R. Kleinbub, Federica Meconi, Matteo Marangoni, Paolo Barilaro, Alice Broggio, Marco Sambin & Paola Sessa. (2014) “Reality†of near-death-experience memories: evidence from a psychodynamic and electrophysiological integrated study. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
Crossref
Steven J. Lynn, Anne Malaktaris, Sean Barnes & Abigail Matthews. 2009. Wiley Encyclopedia of Forensic Science. Wiley Encyclopedia of Forensic Science.
Aileen Oeberst & Hartmut Blank. (2012) Undoing suggestive influence on memory: The reversibility of the eyewitness misinformation effect. Cognition 125:2, pages 141-159.
Crossref
Graham Francis Wagstaff, Jacqueline Mary Wheatcroft, Charlotte Lucy Burt, Hannah Jayne Pilkington, Keely Wilkinson & Jennifer Dianne Hoyle. (2010) Enhancing Witness Memory with Focused Meditation and Eye-Closure: Assessing the Effects of Misinformation. Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology 26:2, pages 152-161.
Crossref
R. N. Carleton, M. P. Abrams & G. J. G. Asmundson. (2010) The Attentional Resource Allocation Scale (ARAS): psychometric properties of a composite measure for dissociation and absorption. Depression and Anxiety 27:8, pages 775-786.
Crossref
Graham Wagstaff. 2010. The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology. The Cambridge Handbook of Forensic Psychology 668 674 .
Steven Jay Lynn, Sean Barnes & Abigail Matthews. 2009. Wiley Encyclopedia of Forensic Science. Wiley Encyclopedia of Forensic Science.
Graham F. Wagstaff. (2009) Is there a future for investigative hypnosis?. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling 6:1, pages 43-57.
Crossref
Graham F. Wagstaff. (2008) Hypnosis and the Law. Criminal Justice and Behavior 35:10, pages 1277-1294.
Crossref
Graham F. Wagstaff, Jon Cole, Jacqueline Wheatcroft, Amanda Anderton & Hannah Madden. (2008) Reducing and reversing pseudomemories with hypnosis. Contemporary Hypnosis 25:3-4, pages 178-191.
Crossref
Timothy J. Perfect, Graham F. Wagstaff, Dawn Moore, Blake Andrews, Victoria Cleveland, Sarah Newcombe, Kelly-Ann Brisbane & Leanne Brown. (2008) How can we help witnesses to remember more? It's an (eyes) open and shut case.. Law and Human Behavior 32:4, pages 314-324.
Crossref
G.F. Wagstaff, J. Cole, J. Wheatcroft, M. Marshall & I. Barsby. (2007) A componential approach to hypnotic memory facilitation: focused meditation, context reinstatement and eye movements. Contemporary Hypnosis 24:3, pages 97-108.
Crossref
Laura Hammond, Graham F. Wagstaff & Jon Cole. (2006) Facilitating eyewitness memory in adults and children with context reinstatement and focused meditation. Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling 3:2, pages 117-130.
Crossref
Elisa Krackow, Steven Jay Lynn & David G. Payne. (2016) The Death of Princess Diana: The Effects of Memory Enhancement Procedures on Flashbulb Memories. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 25:3, pages 197-219.
Crossref
Joseph P. Green & Steven Jay Lynn. (2005) Hypnosis versus relaxation: accuracy and confidence in dating international news events. Applied Cognitive Psychology 19:6, pages 679-691.
Crossref
Graham Wagstaff, Joana Brunas‐Wagstaff, Jon Cole & Jacqueline Wheatcroft. (2006) New directions in forensic hypnosis: facilitating memory with a focused meditation technique. Contemporary Hypnosis 21:1, pages 14-27.
Crossref
Alan Scoboria, Giuliana Mazzoni, Irving Kirsch & Leonard S. Milling. (2002) Immediate and persisting effects of misleading questions and hypnosis on memory reports.. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 8:1, pages 26-32.
Crossref
Amir Muzur, Franco Fabbro, Andrea Clarici, Susanne Braun & Antonio Bava. (2016) Encoding and Recall of Parsed Stories in Hypnosis. Perceptual and Motor Skills 87:3, pages 963-971.
Crossref
Steven Jay Lynn, Timothy G. Lock, Bryan Myers & David G. Payne. (2016) Recalling the Unrecallable: Should Hypnosis Be Used to Recover Memories in Psychotherapy?. Current Directions in Psychological Science 6:3, pages 79-83.
Crossref
Steven Jay Lynn, Bryan Myers, Peter Malinoski & Willem A. Wagenaar. 1997. Recollections of Trauma. Recollections of Trauma 305 336 .
Aileen Oeberst. (2009) Undoing Suggestive Influence: The Reversibility of the Misinformation Effect. SSRN Electronic Journal.
Crossref

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.