2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0070900
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A Preconscious Neural Mechanism of Hypnotically Altered Colors: A Double Case Study

Abstract: Hypnotic suggestions may change the perceived color of objects. Given that chromatic stimulus information is processed rapidly and automatically by the visual system, how can hypnotic suggestions affect perceived colors in a seemingly immediate fashion? We studied the mechanisms of such color alterations by measuring electroencephalography in two highly suggestible participants as they perceived briefly presented visual shapes under posthypnotic color alternation suggestions such as “all the squares are blue”.… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Two participants from this group (>9 HGSHS:A score) responded to the negative visual hallucination item and were invited to participate in the experiment. An additional two, highly hypnotizable individuals were invited to participate based on previous experience of their responsiveness to visual hallucination suggestions 23 . All those who scored <4 in HGSHS:A scored 4 or less in SHSS:C. Four were invited to participate in the experiment, with preference for (higher) age, since HG included only one participant under 30 years.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Two participants from this group (>9 HGSHS:A score) responded to the negative visual hallucination item and were invited to participate in the experiment. An additional two, highly hypnotizable individuals were invited to participate based on previous experience of their responsiveness to visual hallucination suggestions 23 . All those who scored <4 in HGSHS:A scored 4 or less in SHSS:C. Four were invited to participate in the experiment, with preference for (higher) age, since HG included only one participant under 30 years.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sociocognitive theories claim that this experience is not similar to synaesthesia and that conscious recognition of the target inducer (as a square) is first required, followed by cognitive effort to imagine it being red. In contrast, AST predicts that an automatic association emerges and that some highly hypnotizable individuals should even be able to perceive the inducer and concurrent simultaneously, just as some genuine synaesthetes 23 , 26 . Simultaneous synaesthetic experience should make naming the targeted symbol (square) “red” just as easy, requiring the same time and involving the same eye behaviour as naming a non-targeted symbol by its veridical colour.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…In other words, the content of a suggestion can lead individuals to achieve a variety of very precise hypnotic responses, as a function of the desired outcome. Empirical evidence demonstrates this precision across many sensory domains (56,70,71,135,136), cognitive processes (125,137), and ideomotor processing (115) These findings demonstrate that response precision is a core feature of hypnosis; suggestions can lead to great specificity (138).…”
Section: Regulation Of Automatic Processesmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In the visual modality, some findings obtained with highly hypnotizable subjects also suggest that by using hypnotic suggestions, it is possible to influence preconscious or highly automatized information processing such as color perception Koivisto, Kirjanen, Revonsuo, & Kallio, 2013), but possibly only with some of the most hypnotizable individuals (Kallio, Koivisto, & Kaakinen, 2017). Although the auditory and visual information processing systems are differently structured and located in the human brain, there may also be similarities in the effects of hypnotic suggestions between them.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%