Science Finally Tackles Hypnosis
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Science Finally Tackles Hypnosis § SEEDMAGAZINE.
COM
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http://seedmagazine.com/content/print/science_finally_tackles_hypnosis/
SEEDMAGAZINE.COM
NOVEMBER 27, 2014
Science Finally Tackles Hypnosis
OCTOBER 20, 2006
It seems hypnosis has been nearly everywhere over the past few centuries:
onstage with entertainers swinging fat, gold watches; on couches with reclining
psychoanalysis patients; in movies, books, and even children’s cartoons. But the
one gig hypnosis couldn’t get was the scientific laboratory.
Until now.
The long-controversial practice of inducing a trancelike state through suggestion
is getting a modern makeover by scientists armed with the latest neuroimaging
tools and techniques. These researchers are beginning to offer evidence that,
neurologically at least, hypnosis is entirely real.
Credit: Brenda McEwan
“It makes sense that we are using modern tools of neuroscience research to understand what is a fascinating phenomenon,” said David
Spiegel, a psychiatrist at Stanford University. “It’s good for hypnosis, and it’s good for neuroscience.”
The first report of hypnosis in practice dates back to the 18th century and an Austrian physician named Franz Mesmer, whose alleged
otherworldly techniques for putting patients in trancelike states spawned the word “mesmerism.”
Almost from the beginning, the technique was controversial.
Skeptics have charged that the so-called phenomenon is nothing more than social role-playing, its use in medicine simply another form
of the placebo effect. Its employment in psychotherapy has been challenged, particularly in light of claims that it can be used to implant
false memories. And the idea, espoused by some hypnotists, that hypnosis involves an altered state of consciousness known as “trance,”
has only made it seem more questionable.
Though experts quibble over the exact definition of hypnosis, they agree that it involves intense concentration, increased relaxation, and
heightened suggestibility. In 2000, Spiegel and others conducted experiments involving perceptual and sensory experiences that
demonstrated some of the effects hypnosis has on the brain.
Scientists still lack
what would be the
ultimate validation
of this sort of
research: a distinct
neurological
signature of
hypnosis. It has
been difficult to
disentangle the
effects of hypnotic
suggestion from
those of suggestion
alone.
In Spiegel’s study, subjects—some hypnotized, others fully alert—viewed pictures in both color and
grayscale. When hypnotized subjects were told they would see photos in color, the brain regions
involved in the visual processing of color were activated, even if the subjects were actually viewing
the grayscale photos. And when hypnotized subjects were told they would see photos in grayscale,
the activation of the color processing regions decreased, regardless of which photos actually
appeared.
Many studies have also shown that hypnotic suggestion can prompt changes in the brain’s pain
processing centers. Such research has illustrated that when people are hypnotized before painful
procedures, the areas of their brains that process pain are less active.
“When they use hypnosis to alter perception, the subjective experience is altered in measurable
changes in just the right part of the brain,” Spiegel said. “When people say they are feeling less
pain, they really are feeling less pain.”
“It’s providing objective evidence that hypnosis is real,” he continued.
But scientists still lack what would be the ultimate validation of this sort of research: a distinct
neurological signature of hypnosis. So far, it has been difficult to disentangle the effects of hypnotic
suggestion from those of suggestion alone. Researchers must also differentiate between the brain
structures that play a role in hypnosis and those that are merely involved in the perceptual tasks
subjects are asked to perform in these studies.
However, scientists are beginning to make some intriguing observations, particularly in the prefrontal cortex, the brain region
responsible for the brain’s so-called executive functions: integrating the work of other brain structures, governing decision making, and,
perhaps most relevantly, regulating attention. Researchers have long noted that hypnosis can be characterized as an extreme, narrowly
focused form of attention.
Some researchers have found that areas in the prefrontal cortex—particularly the anterior cingulate cortex, which seems to be involved
27.11.2014 13:55
But the other way is to use hypnosis to produce in-the-laboratory experiences that can be studied through neuroimaging.com/content/print/science_finally_tackles_hypnosis/ in attention. may be a technique researchers can use to induce. a psychologist at the University of Texas and the former editor of the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis.11. hallucinations. Amir Raz. ‘domesticate’ hypnosis. “As we do more and more research in laboratories.2014 13:55 . Researchers hope that finding a gene that modulates hypnosis—and the neurochemical pathway it affects—might finally silence skeptics. hypnosis.” said Raz.” said Michael Nash.” Nash said. we can. who has published numerous neuroimaging studies of hypnosis. “Part of the reason it hasn’t been explored before is because of the checkered reputation of hypnosis. the phenomenon will become a more popular—and acceptable—focus of research. as more studies help pin down the brain structures involved in hypnosis. in a sense. a psychiatrist at Columbia University. and his colleagues are now trying to pin down the specific genes that might be responsible for those variations. but studies of identical and fraternal twins indicate that susceptibility to hypnosis may have a genetic component. “There’s two basic ways that neuroimaging is used in hypnosis research. which can prompt perceptual experiences similar to hallucination. Scientists are hoping that. error detection. “One is to use neuroimaging to try to understand hypnosis. “Once you see people getting published in good and reputable journals with hypnosis studies. and resolving conflicts—change their activation patterns during hypnosis. Hypnosis might also be a tool for studying cognitive development—children are much more hypnotizable than adults—and for providing researchers with more information about attentional networks. especially since the work could help illuminate other neurological phenomena.” 27. “The neuroscience link adds a component to the credibility of hypnosis.Science Finally Tackles Hypnosis § SEEDMAGAZINE. might another modern science: genetics.” So.COM 2z2 http://seedmagazine.” For instance. and then study. too. People vary widely in their ability to be hypnotized. it’s going to prompt a whole wave of interest.