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Absorption and hypnotizability: Context effects reexamined.
93
Citations
36
References
1991
Year
Experimental PsychopathologyPersonality PsychologyPsychopathologyPsychiatryContext EffectsPsychophysiologyIndependent SurveyMind-body ConnectionSocial SciencesAbsorption ScalePsychological EvaluationPsychophysicsHypnosisPsychologyMindfulnessHypnotic Responsiveness
Two independent studies failed to find evidence consistent with Council, Kirsch, and Hafner (1986), who argued that the repeatedly observed correlations between Tellegen's (1981) Absorption Scale (TAS) and hypnosis measures were artifacts of testing context, and de Groot, Gwynn, and Spanos (1988), who claimed evidence for a Gender x Context moderator effect. In the present studies, Ss completed the TAS and other personality questionnaires on 2 occasions: during an independent survey and later immediately prior to an assessment of hypnotizability. In Experiment 1 (N = 475), the effect of context on the relation between questionnaire scores and hypnotizability was weak and variable; in Experiment 2 (N = 434), these weak effects were reversed. The results reaffirm the construct validity of absorption as both a major dimension of personality and as a predictor of hypnotic responsiveness.
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