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Chap
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5
Body Rhythms and Mental States
ChapTER 5 Body Rhythms and Mental States 185
Exploring the Dream World
Hypnosis is a procedure in which the practitioner suggests
changes in a person’s sensations, perceptions, thoughts, feelings,
or behavior.
- Hypnotic responsiveness depends more on the efforts and
qualities of the person being hypnotized than on the skill of
the hypnotist. - Hypnotized people cannot be forced to do things against their
will. - Feats performed under hypnosis can be performed by
motivated people without hypnosis. - Hypnosis does not increase the accuracy of memory or
produce a literal re-experiencing of long-ago events. - Hypnotic suggestions have been used effectively for many
medical and psychological purposes.
The Riddle of Hypnosis
- The dissociation view is that hypnosis is a split
in consciousness between a hypnotized part of
the mind and a hidden observer or an executive
control system. - The sociocognitive view regards the hypno-
tized person as using cognitive strategies, such
as imagination, to comply with the hypnotist’s
suggestions.
Theories of Hypnosis
Psychoactive drugs alter perception, mood, thinking, memory, or
behavior by changing the body’s biochemistry.
Consciousness-Altering Drugs
Drug classifications, based on their effects on
the central nervous system, include:
- stimulants.
- depressants.
- opiates.
- psychedelics.
Some drugs, such as marijuana, fall outside of
these classifications.
Classifying Drugs
The physiology of drug effects:
- Psychoactive drugs affect neurotransmitters levels in the brain.
- The use of some psychoactive drugs can lead to tolerance: increased
resistance to a drug’s effects. - When heavy users stop taking a drug, they may suffer severe withdrawal
symptoms.
The effects of a drug may vary for psychological reasons, including: - the person’s experience with the drug.
- the person’s physical condition.
- the environmental setting.
- the person’s mental set, or expectations.
The Physiology and Psychology of Drug Effects
Dreams appear to be out of our control, although some people report having
lucid dreams, in which they control the action. Freud’s psychoanalytic theory
held that dreams provide insight into unconscious motives and desires, but no
objective method exists for verifying psychoanalytic interpretations of dreams.
There are three leading modern theories of dreams:
- The problem-solving approach holds that dreams reflect the ongoing conscious
concerns of waking life and may help us resolve them. - The cognitive approach holds that dreams are a modification of normal waking
cognitive activity. - The activation–synthesis theory holds that dreams occur when the cortex
tries to make sense of spontaneous neural firing initiated in the pons during
REM sleep.
Hypnotistinduces
hypnoticstate
DISSOCIATION THEORIES OF HYPNOSIS
Person responds to suggestions
(“I’m 4 years old”)
Split between hidden observer or executive
control system and rest of mind
SOCIOCOGNITIVE THEORIES OF HYPNOSIS
Social inuence ofhypnotist (“You’re
going back intime”)
Person’cognitions (“Is own
believe in ageregression”)
Person conformsto suggestions
(“I’m 4 yearsold”)