The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2017
Enrico Facco
39 citations
Hypnosis and meditation share common features including induction through focused attention and the ability to intentionally control biological and mental processes, but they differ in scope: hypnosis is used pragmatically for specific therapeutic goals, while Eastern meditation pursues broader philosophical aims of liberation from suffering and illusion.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2020
Giuseppe De Benedittis
16 citations
A new model combining chaotic complex systems theory and quantum mechanics aims to resolve the mind-body dichotomy. The mind-body interface is described as a chaotic system governed by quantum probability. Neuronal activity exhibits chaotic patterns relevant to the mind-body relationship and trance. While quantum consciousness theory remains controversial because quantum physics typically applies to subatomic scales, not macrostructures like the brain, quantum cognition applies quantum formalism to model cognitive phenomena such as human information processing, overcoming limits of Cartesian dualism. Hypnosis, as a state of consciousness, relates to hypnotic cognitive functioning rather than structure.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2024
Mélanie Louras, Audrey Vanhaudenhuyse, Rajanikant Panda et al.
8 citations
Combining virtual reality with mind-body therapies such as meditation, mindfulness, relaxation, and hypnosis can reduce pain in both healthy volunteers and patients. A scoping review of 43 studies found that the combination is feasible, well-tolerated, and potentially useful for decreasing pain, and also improves anxiety, mood, and relaxation. However, insufficient research and a lack of multidimensional studies limit full understanding of their potential. More randomized controlled trials with usability evaluations are needed to incorporate these approaches into routine clinical practice.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2020
Ian E Wickramasekera
3 citations
Dzogchen meditation, practiced for over 1,200 years by Bonpo and Buddhist yogis, uses meditation and yogic exercises to help practitioners awaken from illusions of self and reality that cause suffering. Its philosophy and practice closely resemble hypnosis, employing hypnotic-like techniques such as selective attention, visualization, and posthypnotic suggestion to facilitate advanced insights into the nature of mind. The phenomenological and psychophysiological effects of Dzogchen are comparable to those of hypnosis. Additionally, theoretical similarities exist between Dzogchen and several hypnosis theories, including ego state therapy, neo-dissociation, sociocognitive, and Ericksonian approaches.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2024
Peter L N Naish
2 citations
Hypnosis is sometimes called an altered state of consciousness, but the paper questions what unaltered consciousness is. It argues that free will is an illusion, so it should not be present in the waking state; thus hypnosis may be a more accurate state of consciousness. The sense of free will arises from an experience of agency, which is often absent in hypnosis. The paper discusses how hypnotic, illusory perceptions develop but notes that these processes do not clarify the hard problem of consciousness. It concludes by evaluating the possibility that phenomenal consciousness involves feedback loops that turn simple stimulus registration into aware experiences.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
July 21, 2025
Cameron T Alldredge, Meredith Vagner, Chris Corlett et al.
1 citation
Mystical experiences, marked by unity, transcendence, and a noetic quality, show therapeutic potential in clinical psychology. A new framework centers on the experience itself, requiring a non-ordinary state of consciousness for profound impact. It identifies three pre-state factors: invitation, context, and individual aptitude. After the experience, integration is a necessary mediating factor for beneficial change.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
May 15, 2025
Chris E Corlett, Cameron T Alldredge, Gary R Elkins
1 citation
A standardized hypnosis intervention designed to produce a mystical experience was tested for feasibility and acceptability. Ten college students, all in the mid-to-high range of hypnotizability, received a hypnotic induction and suggestions for a mystical experience in a setting similar to psychedelic drug research. The intervention proved feasible and acceptable, with a composite acceptability score of 9.45, no dropouts, and all participants willing to participate again. Seventy percent of participants met criteria for a complete mystical experience on the Mystical Experience Questionnaire. The results are encouraging but require replication with a larger sample.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2025
Aminata Bicego, Naji Alnagger, Etzel Cardeña et al.
1 citation
Auto-induced cognitive trance (AICT) can produce mystical-type experiences in healthy individuals, with 29% of participants reporting such experiences during AICT compared to none during a rest condition. The study examined twenty-seven people who could self-induce AICT, measuring their religious and spiritual practices and paranormal beliefs beforehand. Participants completed five conditions including rest, imagination, and AICT with or without auditory stimulation. The intensity of the AICT experience and features resembling near-death experiences were linked to mystical-type experiences only during AICT. This is the first demonstration that AICT, a technique distinct from hypnosis or meditation, can induce mystical-type experiences outside life-threatening situations.
The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis
January 1, 2025
Gary Elkins
This special issue explores the intersections between psychedelic experiences, mystical states, and hypnosis, addressing key questions about their similarities, differences, and clinical utility. It examines whether mystical experiences can be facilitated without drugs, the role of suggestion in psychedelics, and the potential of hypnosis and meditation to induce such states. The collection also investigates how psychedelics and hypnosis might enhance creativity and spiritual growth. By presenting thought-provoking answers, it deepens understanding of these non-ordinary states of consciousness and their therapeutic implications.