Proof of the Effectiveness of Hypnosis
Tne Times February 18, 2002 Mark
Henderson, at the American Association for the Advancement
of Science conference in Boston , reports :
Hypnosis really does turn red into white
Scientists have shown that hypnosis produces
clear changes in the brain, the first conclusive proof
that the practice works.
Brain scans have revealed beyond doubt that people who
are hypnotised are not simply humouring their interviewers
but that they see the world differently while in a trance.
The findings offer evidence that hypnosis has biological
as well as psychological effects, confounding the sceptics
who believe that the technique is little more than acting
or role-playing. They also support the use of hypnosis
as a medical tool for treating pain and other disorders.
David Spiegel, Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioural
Sciences at Stanford University in California , who led
the study, said that opinions on hypnosis could no longer
be a question of belief.
“There is faith and belief, and then there's science,” he
said. “This is scientific evidence that something unusual
happens in the brain that doesn't happen ordinarily.
In the study, details of which were presented yesterday
at the American Association for the Advancement of Science
conference, Professor Spiegel's team used a scanning
technique called positron emission tomography (PET) to
examine the brains of eight people who had been hypnotised.
The volunteers, all of whom were highly hypnotisable,
were shown a coloured grid similar to a Mondrian painting
and were asked to imagine the colour draining from the
picture to leave only black and white. The PET scans,
which measure blood flow and activity in the brain, showed
that the subjects started to see the image in black and
white. Blood flow and activity were noticeably reduced
in the parts of the brain that deal with the perception
of colour, while the areas that process grey-scale images
were stimulated.
When the experiment was reversed, with the hypnotised
subjects asked to see a grey-scale grid in colour, the
scientists saw similar results: the PET scans showed
a clear stimulation in the colour centre of the brain,
even though the image was black and white.
“Under hypnosis, believing is seeing,” Professor Spiegel
said. “When people believe there is colour in the picture,
their brains process the colour even if it isn't there.
They are not just telling you what you want to hear:
the way their brains respond to the information is actually
being changed.”
He added: “Hypnosis has been something like the oldest
profession: everyone is interested in it but no one wants
to be seen in public with it.” Sceptics often contended
that people who claimed to have been hypnotised were
in fact acting.
That view has always been difficult to rebut, even in
the face of evidence about the medical benefits of hypnosis:
it is argued that such benefits as the well-documented
capacity of hypnosis to relieve pain are due to the placebo
effect and distraction from pain stimuli.
The new research gives the lie to that school of thought,
proving that hypnosis has a clear physiological effect. www.thetimes.co.uk 18
Feb 2002