Litcius/Paper detail

Trait phenomenological control predicts experience of mirror synaesthesia and the rubber hand illusion

Peter Lush, Vanessa Botan, R. B. Y. Scott, Anil K. Seth, Jamie Ward, Zoltán Dienes

2020Nature Communications136 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In hypnotic responding, expectancies arising from imaginative suggestion drive striking experiential changes (e.g., hallucinations) - which are experienced as involuntary - according to a normally distributed and stable trait ability (hypnotisability). Such experiences can be triggered by implicit suggestion and occur outside the hypnotic context. In large sample studies (of 156, 404 and 353 participants), we report substantial relationships between hypnotisability and experimental measures of experiential change in mirror-sensory synaesthesia and the rubber hand illusion comparable to relationships between hypnotisability and individual hypnosis scale items. The control of phenomenology to meet expectancies arising from perceived task requirements can account for experiential change in psychological experiments.

Topics & Concepts

IllusionPsychologyExperiential learningHypnotic susceptibilityHypnosisTraitContext (archaeology)Phenomenology (philosophy)Illusion of controlCognitive psychologySocial psychologyMedicineComputer scienceEpistemologyMathematics educationBiologyPaleontologyProgramming languagePathologyPhilosophyAlternative medicinePain Management and Placebo EffectAction Observation and SynchronizationVirtual Reality Applications and Impacts