Differential effects of hypnotherapy and cognitive behavioral therapy on the default mode network of depressed patients
Alina Haipt,
David Rosenbaum,
Kristina Fuhr
et al.
Abstract:Hypnosis has been applied in healing procedures since the earliest of recorded history and today it is implemented in a wholesome concept Hypnotherapy (HT1). On a neurophysiological level, hypnosis has been associated with parts of the Default Mode Network (DMN2), but its effects on this network when induced in a treatment setting of a widespread disorder, namely depression, have never been investigated. Depression is associated with abnormal functional connectivity (FC3) of the DMN. Cognitive Behavioral Thera… Show more
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