to control (p = .02). There was also a trend in decreasing opioid doses in the intervention group... more to control (p = .02). There was also a trend in decreasing opioid doses in the intervention group compared to control without differences seen between groups in anxiety and depression. UW TelePain provides access to specialty care, support for local primary care providers, and allows patients to stay local for health care. Supported by NINR #R01NR012450 and # K24NR015340 and NIDA # N01DA-15-4424.
International Journal of Health Promotion and Education, 2016
Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation ... more Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation of trance through ritual, and altered states achieved through meditation has been a means for self-realization, psychological well-being, and increasing health. Indigenous psychologies have elucidated various types of states of consciousness. Folk healing traditions often utilize trance as a means to invoke health, and exist concurrently with modern, western forms of psychiatry and psychotherapy. Comparisons have been made between techniques such the western modality of hypnosis and meditation and yoga. Yoga-nidra (the yoga of sleep) is one of these practices. It is similar to hypnosis and other techniques of mind-body methods of healing used in psychotherapy. Yoga-nidra has been introduced as a contemporary, systematic process of healing by various schools of yoga, both on the subcontinent and in Western countries. These methods are purportedly developed from ancient yogic texts. This article will provide an overview of yoga-nidra, both its origins and current form of practice, as well as a short review of the literature on its efficacy. It will be compared to hypnosis, a systematic, mind-body, trance-inducing technique, used as an adjunct with western forms of psychotherapy. Suggestions will be presented for using these modalities to integrate indigenous concepts of spirituality and psychology and the western models of mental health delivery in contemporary India, and populations of Indian cultural origin living abroad.
Recall your psychotherapy training. You were likely taught in a didactic manner in a graduate pro... more Recall your psychotherapy training. You were likely taught in a didactic manner in a graduate program. Pages upon pages of theory, ideas, and facts were offered to you in the classroom setting. The...
A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American Jou... more A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis.
Attachment theory has become a major influence on both the theory of human development and the pr... more Attachment theory has become a major influence on both the theory of human development and the practice of psychotherapy. It is often touted as one of the main concepts with substantiated findings utilized in therapy. Couples and individual therapies are often focused on the treatment of adult attachment disturbances. In recent decades, titles such as Wallins's Attachment in Psychotherapy (2007) have reintroduced relational factors in psychotherapy through the lens of Bowlby, Ainsworth, and Main's research and theories of infant attachment as they play out in the lives of both the therapist and patient in the consulting room. Attachment Disturbances in Adults: Treatment for Comprehensive Repair is a monumental book that provides a vast amount of detailed information on the history of attachment theory, a comprehensive review of the research clinical treatment literature, and an extensive treatment system. The first 221 pages of the book present history, theory, and research on attachment. The two first sections are profound in the depth of the research undertaken. That alone makes this a text worthy of any university course in attachment theory and how it plays into the development of psychopathology across the life span. The authors provide a comprehensive review of information on treatment systems before launching into their own treatment program for comprehensive attachment repair. Object relations, mentalization, dynamic-maturational model integrative treatment, and schema therapy, as well as others, are among the treatment modalities explored. Following this review, Brown and Elliott provide their own comprehensive protocols for attachment treatment. This is laid out within three pillars: the ideal parent protocol, fostering a range of metacognitive skills, and fostering collaborative nonverbal and verbal behavior. The ideal parent protocol focuses on establishing conditions for the development of a secure working alliance with the therapist.
Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation ... more Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation of trance through ritual, and altered states achieved through meditation has been a means for self-realization, psychological well-being, and increasing health. In- digenous psychologies have elucidated various types of states of consciousness. Folk healing traditions often utilize trance as a means to invoke health, and exist concurrently with modern, western forms of psychiatry and psychotherapy. Comparisons have been made between techniques such the western modality of hypnosis and meditation and yoga. Yoga-nidra (the yoga of sleep) is one of these practices. It is similar to hypnosis and other techniques of mind-body methods of healing used in psychotherapy. Yoga-ni- dra has been introduced as a contemporary, systematic process of healing by various schools of yoga, both on the subcontinent and in Western countries. These methods are purportedly developed from ancient yogic texts. This article will provide an overview of yoga-nidra, both its origins and current form of practice, as well as a short review of the literature on its ef cacy. It will be compared to hypnosis, a systematic, mind-body, trance-inducing technique, used as an adjunct with western forms of psychotherapy. Suggestions will be presented for using these modalities to integrate indigenous con- cepts of spirituality and psychology and the western models of mental health delivery in contemporary India, and populations of Indian cultural origin living abroad.
A Critical Review of Psychoaerobics: An Experiential Method to Empower Therapist Excellence by Je... more A Critical Review of Psychoaerobics: An Experiential Method to Empower Therapist Excellence by Jeffrey K. Zeig
A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American J... more A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis.
ABSTRACT
Creativity and hypnosis have been considered related traits since the 1960s. A great de... more ABSTRACT Creativity and hypnosis have been considered related traits since the 1960s. A great deal of research supports this through the study of quantitative measures of both traits. This study was undertaken in order to replicate research correlating creativity and hypnotizability, but among individuals considered more creative than the general population. Thirty two subjects (n=32) involved in creative fields were administered a battery of hypnosis and creativity measures consisting of the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A, the Tellegen Absorption Scale, the Abbreviated Torrance Tests for Adults, and the O Index of the NEO-PI-R O Index. Six relationships were hypothesized among the variables, and null was rejected only in one; there was a significant correlation between the personality measure of hypnotizability, as represented by the Tellegen Absorption Scale, and the personality measure of creativity, the NEO-PI-R O Index. The scores on these two tests individually were both one and two standard deviations above population norms respectively. The sample means for the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A and were below the population norms, and the samples means for the Abbreviated Torrance Test for Adults were average. It was concluded that the extremely high scores on the Tellegen Absorption Scale and the O Index skewed the results for correlations among all the scores. A main implication of the results was that populations that rank extremely high in aspects of creativity might produce dissipation in the correlation to hypnotizability.
2013). Creative therapeutic technique: Skills for the art of bringing forth change. Phoenix, AZ: ... more 2013). Creative therapeutic technique: Skills for the art of bringing forth change. Phoenix, AZ: Zeig, Tucker & Theisen, 211 pp., $27.95 (paperback), ISBN: 978-1-934442-45-6.
to control (p = .02). There was also a trend in decreasing opioid doses in the intervention group... more to control (p = .02). There was also a trend in decreasing opioid doses in the intervention group compared to control without differences seen between groups in anxiety and depression. UW TelePain provides access to specialty care, support for local primary care providers, and allows patients to stay local for health care. Supported by NINR #R01NR012450 and # K24NR015340 and NIDA # N01DA-15-4424.
International Journal of Health Promotion and Education, 2016
Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation ... more Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation of trance through ritual, and altered states achieved through meditation has been a means for self-realization, psychological well-being, and increasing health. Indigenous psychologies have elucidated various types of states of consciousness. Folk healing traditions often utilize trance as a means to invoke health, and exist concurrently with modern, western forms of psychiatry and psychotherapy. Comparisons have been made between techniques such the western modality of hypnosis and meditation and yoga. Yoga-nidra (the yoga of sleep) is one of these practices. It is similar to hypnosis and other techniques of mind-body methods of healing used in psychotherapy. Yoga-nidra has been introduced as a contemporary, systematic process of healing by various schools of yoga, both on the subcontinent and in Western countries. These methods are purportedly developed from ancient yogic texts. This article will provide an overview of yoga-nidra, both its origins and current form of practice, as well as a short review of the literature on its efficacy. It will be compared to hypnosis, a systematic, mind-body, trance-inducing technique, used as an adjunct with western forms of psychotherapy. Suggestions will be presented for using these modalities to integrate indigenous concepts of spirituality and psychology and the western models of mental health delivery in contemporary India, and populations of Indian cultural origin living abroad.
Recall your psychotherapy training. You were likely taught in a didactic manner in a graduate pro... more Recall your psychotherapy training. You were likely taught in a didactic manner in a graduate program. Pages upon pages of theory, ideas, and facts were offered to you in the classroom setting. The...
A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American Jou... more A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis.
Attachment theory has become a major influence on both the theory of human development and the pr... more Attachment theory has become a major influence on both the theory of human development and the practice of psychotherapy. It is often touted as one of the main concepts with substantiated findings utilized in therapy. Couples and individual therapies are often focused on the treatment of adult attachment disturbances. In recent decades, titles such as Wallins's Attachment in Psychotherapy (2007) have reintroduced relational factors in psychotherapy through the lens of Bowlby, Ainsworth, and Main's research and theories of infant attachment as they play out in the lives of both the therapist and patient in the consulting room. Attachment Disturbances in Adults: Treatment for Comprehensive Repair is a monumental book that provides a vast amount of detailed information on the history of attachment theory, a comprehensive review of the research clinical treatment literature, and an extensive treatment system. The first 221 pages of the book present history, theory, and research on attachment. The two first sections are profound in the depth of the research undertaken. That alone makes this a text worthy of any university course in attachment theory and how it plays into the development of psychopathology across the life span. The authors provide a comprehensive review of information on treatment systems before launching into their own treatment program for comprehensive attachment repair. Object relations, mentalization, dynamic-maturational model integrative treatment, and schema therapy, as well as others, are among the treatment modalities explored. Following this review, Brown and Elliott provide their own comprehensive protocols for attachment treatment. This is laid out within three pillars: the ideal parent protocol, fostering a range of metacognitive skills, and fostering collaborative nonverbal and verbal behavior. The ideal parent protocol focuses on establishing conditions for the development of a secure working alliance with the therapist.
Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation ... more Trance states have long been used within a healing context in India. The use of chant, evocation of trance through ritual, and altered states achieved through meditation has been a means for self-realization, psychological well-being, and increasing health. In- digenous psychologies have elucidated various types of states of consciousness. Folk healing traditions often utilize trance as a means to invoke health, and exist concurrently with modern, western forms of psychiatry and psychotherapy. Comparisons have been made between techniques such the western modality of hypnosis and meditation and yoga. Yoga-nidra (the yoga of sleep) is one of these practices. It is similar to hypnosis and other techniques of mind-body methods of healing used in psychotherapy. Yoga-ni- dra has been introduced as a contemporary, systematic process of healing by various schools of yoga, both on the subcontinent and in Western countries. These methods are purportedly developed from ancient yogic texts. This article will provide an overview of yoga-nidra, both its origins and current form of practice, as well as a short review of the literature on its ef cacy. It will be compared to hypnosis, a systematic, mind-body, trance-inducing technique, used as an adjunct with western forms of psychotherapy. Suggestions will be presented for using these modalities to integrate indigenous con- cepts of spirituality and psychology and the western models of mental health delivery in contemporary India, and populations of Indian cultural origin living abroad.
A Critical Review of Psychoaerobics: An Experiential Method to Empower Therapist Excellence by Je... more A Critical Review of Psychoaerobics: An Experiential Method to Empower Therapist Excellence by Jeffrey K. Zeig
A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American J... more A review of Trance-Migrations: Stories of India, Tales of Hypnosis. Published in the American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis.
ABSTRACT
Creativity and hypnosis have been considered related traits since the 1960s. A great de... more ABSTRACT Creativity and hypnosis have been considered related traits since the 1960s. A great deal of research supports this through the study of quantitative measures of both traits. This study was undertaken in order to replicate research correlating creativity and hypnotizability, but among individuals considered more creative than the general population. Thirty two subjects (n=32) involved in creative fields were administered a battery of hypnosis and creativity measures consisting of the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A, the Tellegen Absorption Scale, the Abbreviated Torrance Tests for Adults, and the O Index of the NEO-PI-R O Index. Six relationships were hypothesized among the variables, and null was rejected only in one; there was a significant correlation between the personality measure of hypnotizability, as represented by the Tellegen Absorption Scale, and the personality measure of creativity, the NEO-PI-R O Index. The scores on these two tests individually were both one and two standard deviations above population norms respectively. The sample means for the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A and were below the population norms, and the samples means for the Abbreviated Torrance Test for Adults were average. It was concluded that the extremely high scores on the Tellegen Absorption Scale and the O Index skewed the results for correlations among all the scores. A main implication of the results was that populations that rank extremely high in aspects of creativity might produce dissipation in the correlation to hypnotizability.
2013). Creative therapeutic technique: Skills for the art of bringing forth change. Phoenix, AZ: ... more 2013). Creative therapeutic technique: Skills for the art of bringing forth change. Phoenix, AZ: Zeig, Tucker & Theisen, 211 pp., $27.95 (paperback), ISBN: 978-1-934442-45-6.
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Papers by Scott Hoye
Creativity and hypnosis have been considered related traits since the 1960s. A great deal of research supports this through the study of quantitative measures of both traits. This study was undertaken in order to replicate research correlating creativity and hypnotizability, but among individuals considered more creative than the general population. Thirty two subjects (n=32) involved in creative fields were administered a battery of hypnosis and creativity measures consisting of the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A, the Tellegen Absorption Scale, the Abbreviated Torrance Tests for Adults, and the O Index of the NEO-PI-R O Index. Six relationships were hypothesized among the variables, and null was rejected only in one; there was a significant correlation between the personality measure of hypnotizability, as represented by the Tellegen Absorption Scale, and the personality measure of creativity, the NEO-PI-R O Index. The scores on these two tests individually were both one and two standard deviations above population norms respectively. The sample means for the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A and were below the population norms, and the samples means for the Abbreviated Torrance Test for Adults were average. It was concluded that the extremely high scores on the Tellegen Absorption Scale and the O Index skewed the results for correlations among all the scores. A main implication of the results was that populations that rank extremely high in aspects of creativity might produce dissipation in the correlation to hypnotizability.
Creativity and hypnosis have been considered related traits since the 1960s. A great deal of research supports this through the study of quantitative measures of both traits. This study was undertaken in order to replicate research correlating creativity and hypnotizability, but among individuals considered more creative than the general population. Thirty two subjects (n=32) involved in creative fields were administered a battery of hypnosis and creativity measures consisting of the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A, the Tellegen Absorption Scale, the Abbreviated Torrance Tests for Adults, and the O Index of the NEO-PI-R O Index. Six relationships were hypothesized among the variables, and null was rejected only in one; there was a significant correlation between the personality measure of hypnotizability, as represented by the Tellegen Absorption Scale, and the personality measure of creativity, the NEO-PI-R O Index. The scores on these two tests individually were both one and two standard deviations above population norms respectively. The sample means for the Harvard Group Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility Form A and were below the population norms, and the samples means for the Abbreviated Torrance Test for Adults were average. It was concluded that the extremely high scores on the Tellegen Absorption Scale and the O Index skewed the results for correlations among all the scores. A main implication of the results was that populations that rank extremely high in aspects of creativity might produce dissipation in the correlation to hypnotizability.