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Original Article

Auditory Event-Related Potentials While Ignoring Tone Stimuli: Attentional Differences Reflected in Stimulus Intensity and Latency Responses in Low and Highly Hypnotizable Persons

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Pages 57-69 | Received 02 Sep 1995, Published online: 07 Jul 2009

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Read on this site (6)

Ulrike Halsband & Thomas Gerhard Wolf. (2019) Functional Changes in Brain Activity After Hypnosis: Neurobiological Mechanisms and Application to Patients with a Specific Phobia—Limitations and Future Directions. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 67:4, pages 449-474.
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Anna V. Kirenskaya, Zinaida I. Storozheva, Svetlana V. Solntseva, Vladimir Yu Novototsky-Vlasov & Mikhail N. Gordeev. (2019) AUDITORY EVOKED POTENTIALS EVIDENCE FOR DIFFERENCES IN INFORMATION PROCESSING BETWEEN HIGH AND LOW HYPNOTIZABLE SUBJECTS. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 67:1, pages 81-103.
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Thilo Hinterberger, Julian Schöner & Ulrike Halsband. (2011) Analysis of Electrophysiological State Patterns and Changes During Hypnosis Induction. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 59:2, pages 165-179.
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Jennifer Kim Penberthy, Daniel Cox, Raina Robeva, Boris Kovatchev & R. Lawrence Merkel. (2006) The EEG Consistency Index as a Psycho-Physiological Marker of ADHD and Methylphenidate Response: Replication of Results. Journal of Neurotherapy 10:1, pages 33-43.
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Arreed Barabasz, Marianne Barabasz, Stacia Jensen, Steven Calvin, Michael Trevisan & Dennis Warner. (1999) Cortical event-related potentials show the structure of hypnotic suggestions is crucial. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 47:1, pages 5-22.
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HelenJ. Crawford, Timothy Knebel, Lyla Kaplan, JenniferM. C. Vendemia, Min Xie, Scott Jamison & KarlH. Pribram. (1998) Hypnotic analgesia: 1. somatosensory event-related potential changes to noxious stimuli and 2. transfer learning to reduce chronic low back pain. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis 46:1, pages 92-132.
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Articles from other publishers (10)

José R. Maldonado & David Spiegel. 2020. Tasman’s Psychiatry. Tasman’s Psychiatry 1 59 .
Thomas Wolf & Ulrike Halsband. (2021) Hypnose bei Angst und Dentalphobie. Der Freie Zahnarzt 65:2, pages 54-58.
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Tommaso Bocci, Davide Barloscio, Laura Parenti, Ferdinando Sartucci, Giancarlo Carli & Enrica L. Santarcangelo. (2016) High Hypnotizability Impairs the Cerebellar Control of Pain. The Cerebellum 16:1, pages 55-61.
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José R. Maldonado & David Spiegel. 2015. Psychiatry. Psychiatry 1892 1922 .
Claudio Del Percio, Antonio Ivano Triggiani, Nicola Marzano, Mario De Rosas, Anna Valenzano, Annamaria Petito, Antonello Bellomo, Andrea Soricelli, Giuseppe Cibelli & Claudio Babiloni. (2013) Subjects’ hypnotizability level affects somatosensory evoked potentials to non-painful and painful stimuli. Clinical Neurophysiology 124:7, pages 1448-1455.
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Ulrike Halsband, Susanne Mueller, Thilo Hinterberger & Simon Strickner. (2009) Plasticity changes in the brain in hypnosis and meditation. Contemporary Hypnosis 26:4, pages 194-215.
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Sakari Kallio & Antti Revonsuo. (2006) Hypnotic phenomena and altered states of consciousness: a multilevel framework of description and explanation. Contemporary Hypnosis 20:3, pages 111-164.
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Justine E. OwensAnn G. TaylorDouglas Degood. (1999) Complementary and Alternative Medicine and Psychologic Factors: Toward an Individual Differences Model of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Use and Outcomes. The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine 5:6, pages 529-541.
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Larry C. Lyons & Helen J. Crawford. (1997) Sustained attentional and disattentional abilities and arousability: Factor analysis and relationships to hypnotic susceptibility. Personality and Individual Differences 23:6, pages 1071-1084.
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Jochen Kaiser, Robert Barker, Corinna Haenschel, Torsten Baldeweg & John H. Gruzelier. (1997) Hypnosis and event-related potential correlates of error processing in a stroop-type paradigm: a test of the frontal hypothesis. International Journal of Psychophysiology 27:3, pages 215-222.
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