Research Topics
| I KirschSummaryAffiliation: University of Connecticut Country: USA Publications
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Detail Information
Publications
Hypnotic suggestion: a musical mathaphorI Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of CT, Storrs 06269 1020, USA
Am J Clin Hypn 39:271-7; discussion 277-81. 1997..Hypnosis enhances suggestibility to a modest degree and increases the effectiveness of psychotherapy...
Suggestibility or hypnosis: what do our scales really measure?I Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269 1020, USA
Int J Clin Exp Hypn 45:212-25. 1997....
Dissociation theories of hypnosisI Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269 1020, USA
Psychol Bull 123:100-15. 1998..The authors review the empirical base, conceptual issues, and strengths and weaknesses of both theories...
Dissociating the wheat from the chaff in theories of hypnosis: Reply to Kihlstrom (1998) and Woody and Sadler (1998)I Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, 406 Babbidge Road, Storrs 06269 1020
Psychol Bull 123:198-202. 1998....
Expectancy and suggestibility: are the effects of environmental enhancement due to detection?I Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269 1020, USA
Int J Clin Exp Hypn 47:40-5. 1999....
Automaticity in clinical psychologyI Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269 1020, USA
Am Psychol 54:504-15. 1999..Following this review, the authors summarize some of the ways in which knowledge of response expectancy effects and other automatic processes that influence experience and behavior can enhance clinical practice...
Attentional resources in hypnotic respondingI Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs 06269 1020, USA
Int J Clin Exp Hypn 47:175-91. 1999..Under conditions of low cognitive load, simulators displayed less recall than did nonsimulating participants during suggested amnesia, and they reported smaller subjective responses to ideomotor and challenge suggestions...
St John's wort, conventional medication, and placebo: an egregious double standardI Kirsch
Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT 06269, USA
Complement Ther Med 11:193-5. 2003..Instead they show that hypericum and conventional antidepressants are equally effective (or ineffective). This suggests that different standards are being used to evaluate the two types of treatment...
Coping-related expectancies and dispositions as prospective predictors of coping responses and symptomsS J Catanzaro
Illinois State University, Department of Psychology, Normal 61790 4620, USA
J Pers 68:757-88. 2000..Results underscore the importance of distinguishing between expectancies and other personality variables related to coping...
Changing beliefs about implausible autobiographical events: a little plausibility goes a long wayG A Mazzoni
Department of Psychology, Seton Hall University, South Orange, New Jersey 07079, USA
J Exp Psychol Appl 7:51-9. 2001..These data suggest that false autobiographical beliefs can be induced in clinical and forensic contexts even for initially implausible events...
Dissociative identity disorder and the sociocognitive model: recalling the lessons of the pastS O Lilienfeld
Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30322, USA
Psychol Bull 125:507-23. 1999..The present authors conclude that Gleaves's analysis underemphasized the cultural manifestations of multiple role enactments and that the history of DID imparts a valuable lesson to contemporary psychotherapists...
The response set theory of hypnosis: expectancy and physiologyI Kirsch
University of Connecticut, USA
Am J Clin Hypn 44:69-73. 2001..As shown in this corrected version, Kirsch proposes that mind states and body states be considered as two ways of viewing a single psychophysiological phenomenon...
