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The response set theory of hypnosis reconsidered: toward an integrative model

Steven Jay Lynn, Joseph P. Green, Anoushiravan Zahedi, Clément Apelian

2022American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis25 citationsDOI

Abstract

Irving Kirsch is a leading figure in the field of psychological science who has advanced our understanding of hypnosis in key respects that have withstood the tests of time and replication. We honor his prodigious contributions over his distinguished career and extend his response expectancy theory in an integrative model that encompasses predictive coding. We review the construct of expectancies that he articulated and championed for decades and extended in response set theory. We propose novel hypotheses to align his innovative contributions with the most current findings in psychological science and to acknowledge the heuristic value of his work. We especially focus on (I) how the response set theory can be conceptualized in terms of the predictive coding model and (II) psycho-social constructs that need to be considered to better understand the effects of expectancies on hypnotic phenomena in an open and evidence-based integrative model of hypnosis.

Topics & Concepts

HypnosisExpectancy theoryPsychologyHonorSet (abstract data type)Cognitive psychologyCognitive scienceSocial psychologyEpistemologyComputer scienceMedicineProgramming languageAlternative medicinePathologyPhilosophyOperating systemPain Management and Placebo EffectAcademic and Historical Perspectives in PsychologyMental Health Research Topics
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