“…Accumulating evidence suggests that dissociation accounts for some of the heterogeneity in high hypnotic suggestibility (Dell, 2009;Terhune & Cardeña, 2015). Indeed, high dissociative highly suggestible (HDHS) individuals are more responsive to hypnotic suggestions for hallucinations than low dissociative highly suggestible (LDHS) individuals and are also characterized by an elevated propensity for dissociative states and previous exposure to stressful life events (Terhune, Cardeña, & Lindgren, 2011), both of which reliably covary with hallucination-proneness in clinical and nonclinical samples (Bailey et al, 2018;Fassler et al, 2006;Irwin, Schofield, & Baker, 2014;Luhrmann et al, 2019;Pilton, Varese, Berry, & Bucci, 2015). Previous research has found an interaction between hypnotic suggestibility and dissociation in the reporting of anomalous experiences, with both variables related to anomalous experiences, including hallucinations, particularly when in conjunction (Pekala, Kumar, & Marcano, 1995).…”