Relationship between hypnosis and personality trait in participants with high or low hypnotic susceptibility. 2017

Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry, School of Public Health.

BACKGROUND The relationship between normal personality and hypnotic susceptibility is important for understanding mental processing and mental disorders, but it is less consistent in normal people or in patients with a psychiatric disorder. We have hypothesized that the correlation exists but varies in individuals with different levels of hypnotizability. METHODS We invited 72 individuals with high (HIGH group) and 47 individuals with low (LOW group) hypnotic susceptibilities to undertake tests of NEO-PI-R and the Stanford Hypnotic Susceptibility Scale, Form C (SHSSC). RESULTS The HIGH group scored significantly higher than the LOW group did on openness to experience and its facet openness to feelings. In the LOW group, SHSSC total was positively predicted by openness to ideas; age regression was positively predicted by openness to experience and negatively predicted by extraversion; anosmia to ammonia was negatively predicted by agreeableness; and negative visual hallucination was positively predicted by openness to experience. In the HIGH group, hallucinated voice was positively predicted by openness to experience and negatively predicted by agreeableness, and posthypnotic amnesia was positively predicted by extraversion and negatively predicted by openness to experience. CONCLUSIONS The associations between normal personality traits and hypnotic susceptibility items were weak and different in the two groups, which imply that managing mental or somatoform disorders might be through adjusting hypnotizability and mobilizing personality functions.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
October 2005, Brain research bulletin,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
February 1987, Psychological reports,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
August 1962, Journal of consulting psychology,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
April 1999, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
February 1995, Journal of abnormal psychology,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
January 1962, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
July 2000, The American journal of clinical hypnosis,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
January 1985, International journal of psychosomatics : official publication of the International Psychosomatics Institute,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
December 1973, Perceptual and motor skills,
Yingchun Zhang, and Yunke Wang, and Chanchan Shen, and Yingying Ye, and Si Shen, and Bingren Zhang, and Jiawei Wang, and Wei Chen, and Wei Wang
April 1964, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis,
Copied contents to your clipboard!