Abstract

Several theories of hypnosis assume that responses to hypnotic suggestions are implemented through top-down modulations via a frontoparietal network that is involved in monitoring and cognitive control. The current study addressed this issue re-analyzing previously published event-related-potentials (ERP) (N1, P2, and P3b amplitudes) and combined it with source reconstruction and connectivity analysis methods. ERP data were obtained from participants engaged in a visual oddball paradigm composed of target, standard, and distractor stimuli during a hypnosis (HYP) and a control (CON) condition. In both conditions, participants were asked to count the rare targets presented on a video screen. During HYP participants received suggestions that a wooden board in front of their eyes would obstruct their view of the screen. The results showed that participants’ counting accuracy was significantly impaired during HYP compared to CON. ERP components in the N1 and P2 window revealed no amplitude differences between CON and HYP at sensor-level. In contrast, P3b amplitudes in response to target stimuli were significantly reduced during HYP compared to CON. Source analysis of the P3b amplitudes in response to targets indicated that HYP was associated with reduced source activities in occipital and parietal brain areas related to stimulus categorization and attention. We further explored how these brain sources interacted by computing time-frequency effective connectivity between electrodes that best represented frontal, parietal, and occipital sources. This analysis revealed reduced directed information flow from parietal attentional to frontal executive sources during processing of target stimuli. These results provide preliminary evidence that hypnotic suggestions of a visual blockade are associated with a disruption of the coupling within the frontoparietal network implicated in top-down control.

Highlights

  • Multiple studies have demonstrated that hypnotic suggestions can significantly influence the cognitive and emotional processing of sensory stimuli while persons are hypnotized

  • The results showed that hypnotic suggestions led to a significant reduction in the P3b ERP amplitude, which was strongly associated with impaired counting performance

  • (3) we examined whether effects of hypnosis are linked to modulations of the interactive connectivity profile between frontal, parietal, and occipital electrodes by studying the effective connectivity

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Summary

Introduction

Multiple studies have demonstrated that hypnotic suggestions can significantly influence the cognitive and emotional processing of sensory stimuli while persons are hypnotized. Well hypnotized individuals commonly report significant changes of the gestalt of objects [1,2,3], modulations of colour [4,5,6], hue [4] and other physical properties of visual stimuli [7]. Further studies have reported deafness or modulated loudness [8], and changes of the smell of olfactory stimuli [9]. Others demonstrated reduced or no pain in response to real noxious events, when suggested that a virtual anaesthetic substance (cream, fluids) would block somatosensory receptors of their skin [10,11,12,13,14,15,16]

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