1970
DOI: 10.1080/00207147008415910
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The comparison of three suggestion techniques for increasing reading efficiency utilizing a counterbaunced research paradigm

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1971
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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…It is also possible to merely omit the words sleep or hypnosis from a traditional induction procedure, perhaps substituting the word relaxation (Donk, Vingoe, Hall, & Doty, 1970;Swiercinsky & Coe, 1971;Vingoe, 1973). The suggestions that the subject is being hypnotized are then either implicit in the situation or they are communicated indirectly by means of gestures or tone of voice.…”
Section: The Less Responsive Subjectmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also possible to merely omit the words sleep or hypnosis from a traditional induction procedure, perhaps substituting the word relaxation (Donk, Vingoe, Hall, & Doty, 1970;Swiercinsky & Coe, 1971;Vingoe, 1973). The suggestions that the subject is being hypnotized are then either implicit in the situation or they are communicated indirectly by means of gestures or tone of voice.…”
Section: The Less Responsive Subjectmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If we adopt a modified procedure in which the words "sleep" or "hypnosis" are not used, or if some form of an "alert trance" is employed in which the term "altered state of consciousness" is substituted for the term "hypnosis" (Donk, et al, 1970;Swiercinsky & Coe, 1971;Vingoe, 1972), S is likely to think to himself, "This is something like hypnosis," or "This is just another way to hypnotize me;" and the experience which results will then represent some combination of the explicit suggestions of the hypnotist and the implicit suggestions conveyed by S's own preexisting conceptions of hypnosis as a state resembling sleep. If we have been "talking sleep" to S for 10 or 15 min., he will surely feel less responsive than he might otherwise be, provided our suggestions have had any effect at all.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%