Hypnotic experience is related to emotional contagion.

Etzel Cardeña, Devin B Terhune, Angelica Lööf, Sandra Buratti
Author Information
  1. Etzel Cardeña: Department of Psychology, Center for Research on Consciousness and Anomalous Psychology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden. Etzel.Cardena@psychology.lu.se

Abstract

The authors conducted 2 studies to evaluate whether emotional contagion, the propensity to automatically imitate the emotional expressions of others and experience the corresponding emotions, is related to behavioral and experiential indices of hypnotizability and whether such a relationship is influenced by administration context. In Study 1, behavioral and subjective measures of hypnotizability were measured alongside emotional contagion in the same context. In Study 2, different measures of hypnotizability and hypnotic depth were administered, whereas emotional contagion was independently measured in a different (nonhypnotic) context. Emotional contagion correlated with behavioral and experiential indices of hypnotizability in Study 1 but only with the latter in Study 2. The authors interpret the results as reflecting a positive relationship between emotional contagion and, at least, experiential features of hypnotizability and strengthening the case for the importance of affectivity in hypnotic responsiveness.

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adult
Automatism
Emotions
Facial Expression
Female
Humans
Hypnosis
Imitative Behavior
Male
Middle Aged
Psychometrics
Social Facilitation
Suggestion
Surveys and Questionnaires
Young Adult

Word Cloud

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