Hypnosis and conversion hysteria: a unifying model.

There are many similarities between the symptoms of conversion hysteria and phenomena produced in hypnotic contexts. This paper reviews some of those similarities and considers more general features associated with both hypnotic phenomena and conversion hysteria symptoms such as lack of concern, perceived involuntariness, the display of ''implicit knowledge'' and their apparently compliant nature. Neurophysiological and brain-imaging studies of hypnotically produced effects and conversion symptoms are described, which implicate frontal cortical structures in moderating the respective changes elsewhere in the brain, particularly in cingulate cortex. A recurrent theme is the apparent paradox which exists between, on the one hand, the subjective reality and involuntariness of both hypnotic phenomena and the symptoms of conversion hysteria and, on the other, the fact that objectively they appear to be role-congruent enactments responsive to the manipulation of motivational factors, expectancy, and social influence. A model of consciousness and self-awareness is presented which attempts to resolve that paradox whilst describing similar mechanisms underlying hypnotic phenomena and conversion hysteria symptoms. The model develops the idea of a central executive structure, similar to the notion of a supervisory attentional system, acting outside self-awareness but at a late stage of information processing which can be directly influenced from both internal and external sources to produce the relevant phenomena. The paper ends by proposing that as conversion disorder, pain disorder, and the dissociation disorders appear to be linked by a common mechanism they should be classified together under the heading of auto-suggestive disorder.

[1]  C Nahmias,et al.  Where the imaginal appears real: a positron emission tomography study of auditory hallucinations. , 1998, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[2]  E. Bliss Multiple Personality, Allied Disorders and Hypnosis , 1986 .

[3]  R. Bryant,et al.  Visual conversion disorder: a case analysis of the influence of visual information. , 1989, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[4]  D. Oakley,et al.  THE EFFECT OF GUIDED IMAGERY IN A HYPNOTIC CONTEXT ON FOREARM BLOOD FLOW , 1998 .

[5]  P. Spinhoven,et al.  Pseudo-epileptic seizures: Hypnosis as a diagnostic tool , 1995, Seizure.

[6]  Theodore Xenophon Barber,et al.  Hypnosis: A Scientific Approach , 1981 .

[7]  G. S. Wasserman Behavioral Neurology (3rd ed). , 1986 .

[8]  McCue Pa,et al.  Hypnosis in the elucidation of hysterical aphonia: a case report. , 1988 .

[9]  E. Hilgard Divided Consciousness: Multiple Controls In Human Thought And Action , 1977 .

[10]  I. Kirsch,et al.  Altered state of hypnosis: Changes in the theoretical landscape. , 1995 .

[11]  M. Bushnell,et al.  Pain affect encoded in human anterior cingulate but not somatosensory cortex. , 1997, Science.

[12]  S. Lynn,et al.  Theories of hypnosis : current models and perspectives , 1991 .

[13]  H. Crawford,et al.  The nature of hypnotic analgesia: neurophysiological foundation and evidence , 1998 .

[14]  Underwood Hw The validity of hypnotically induced visual hallucinations. , 1960 .

[15]  P. Spinhoven,et al.  The Case for a Dissociative Interpretation of Pseudoepileptic Seizures , 1996, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[16]  R. Bickford,et al.  HYPNOTIC PHENOMENA, INCLUDING HYPNOTICALLY ACTIVATED SEIZURES, STUDIED WITH THE ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAM , 1955, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[17]  Gereon R Fink,et al.  The functional anatomy of a hysterical paralysis , 1997, Cognition.

[18]  R. Van Dyck,et al.  The diagnosis of psychogenic non-epileptic seizures: A review , 1997, Seizure.

[19]  I. Kirsch,et al.  Surreptitious observation of responses to hypnotically suggested hallucinations: a test of the compliance hypothesis. , 1998, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.

[20]  Richard J. Brown,et al.  Hypnosis and cognitive-experiential self-theory: A new conceptualization for hypnosis? , 1997 .

[21]  I. Veith Hysteria: The History of a Disease , 1965 .

[22]  E. Woody,et al.  Dissociation in hypnosis and frontal executive function. , 1998, The American journal of clinical hypnosis.

[23]  Juhani Partanen,et al.  Altered cerebral blood flow during hysterical paresthesia , 1995, Biological Psychiatry.

[24]  John Gruzelier,et al.  A working model of the neurophysiology of hypnosis: a review of evidence , 1998 .

[25]  M. Nash,et al.  Contemporary hypnosis research , 1992 .

[26]  I. Kirsch,et al.  Social–Cognitive Alternatives to Dissociation Theories of Hypnotic Involuntariness , 1998 .

[27]  T. Shallice From Neuropsychology to Mental Structure: Converging Operations: Specific Syndromes and Evidence from Normal Subjects , 1988 .

[28]  H. Sackeim,et al.  A model of hysterical and hypnotic blindness: cognition, motivation, and awareness. , 1979, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[29]  A. Barnier,et al.  Posthypnotic responding: knowing when to stop helps to keep it going. , 1998, The International journal of clinical and experimental hypnosis.

[30]  R. van Dyck,et al.  The inpatient treatment of patients suffering from (motor) conversion symptoms: a description of eight cases. , 1998, International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis.

[31]  G. Wagstaff The semantics and physiology of hypnosis as an altered state: towards a definition of hypnosis , 1998 .

[32]  T. Barber,et al.  EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES IN 'HYPNOTIC' BEHAVIOUR: SUGGESTED DEAFNESS EVALUATED BY DELAYED AUDITORY FEEDBACK. , 1964, British journal of psychology.

[33]  Richard J. Brown,et al.  Hypnotic susceptibility and holistic/emotional styles of thinking , 1998 .

[34]  D. Oakley,et al.  Hypnotic susceptibility, or F-bias: Its relevance to eating disorders , 1998 .

[35]  H. J. Grosz,et al.  EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS OF HYSTERICAL BLINDNESS: A FOLLOW-UP REPORT AND NEW EXPERIMENTAL DATA. , 1965, Archives of general psychiatry.

[36]  Lawrence Weiskrantz,et al.  Consciousness Lost and Found: A Neuropsychological Exploration , 1999 .

[37]  M. Orne,et al.  The nature of hypnosis: artifact and essence. , 1959, Journal of abnormal psychology.

[38]  I. Kirsch Changing expectations: A key to effective psychotherapy. , 1990 .

[39]  A. Barnier,et al.  Hypnotic anaesthesia and the circle-touch test: investigating the components of the instructions , 1997 .