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The Plymouth Student Scientist

Document Type

Psychology Article

Abstract

The relationship between hypnotic suggestibility and a propensity to engage in ideomotor action was investigated in 36 participants from the city of Plymouth, 24 of whom were psychology undergraduates from the University of Plymouth. Each participant carried out three hypnotic suggestibility tests before carrying out two computer-based ideomotor action tasks: a Brass finger-release task and an action-planning task. It was found that the higher a person’s hypnotic suggestibility, the faster they completed ideomotor tasks such as compatible trials in the Brass task (r = +.37, n = 27, p < .05) and the inverse action planning trials (r = +.35, n = 27, p <.05). This suggests that the reason why some people are more susceptible to hypnotic suggestion than others is because they are able to engage more readily in ideomotor action.

Publication Date

2013-07-01

Publication Title

The Plymouth Student Scientist

Volume

6

Issue

1

First Page

119

Last Page

136

ISSN

1754-2383

Deposit Date

May 2019

Embargo Period

2024-07-03

URI

http://hdl.handle.net/10026.1/14012

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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