General

Decoded: What Happens to your Brain when it is affected by Hypnosis?

Author : NewsGram Desk
  • The team looked more closely at the processing of visual stimuli and asked participants to look at a screen which had various symbols
  • The hypnosis influences specific regions of the brain while it receives a visual stimulus and greatly impairs the brain's deeper processing operations, such as counting

London, July 8, 2017: When the brain is affected by hypnosis — a trance-like state with focussed attention and reduced peripheral awareness — it faces an extreme reduction in its activities, although simple perception still takes place, according to a new study.

The findings showed that the hypnosis influences specific regions of the brain while it receives a visual stimulus and greatly impairs the brain's deeper processing operations, such as counting.

"In our study, we are looking at how the brain makes hypnotic states possible," said Wolfgang Miltner, Professor at the Friedrich Schiller University in Jena, Germany.

For the study, detailed in the journal Scientific Reports, the team looked more closely at the processing of visual stimuli and asked participants to look at a screen which had various symbols, such as a circle or a triangle. They were then given the task of counting a particular symbol.

At the same time, they were also told to imagine that there was a wooden board in front of their eyes. As a result of the suggested obstruction, the number of counting errors rose significantly, the researchers said.

"When we look at the neural processes that take place in the brain while processing the symbols, we see that around 400 milliseconds after the presentation of the to-be-counted symbol, there is an extreme reduction in brain activity, although it should normally be very high," explained Barbara Schmidt, from the Friedrich Schiller University.

"However, a short time before this — up to 200 milliseconds after presentation of the stimulus — there are no differences to be seen," Schmidt added.

This suggests that although simple perception still takes place, deeper processing operations, such as counting, are greatly impaired, the researchers noted. (IANS)

Subscribe to our channels on YouTube and WhatsApp

Download our app on Play Store

The Great Aviation Disaster Cover-Up? One Year After the Air India Plane Crash, Victims' Families Are Still Searching for Answers

AAIB allegedly Asked Pilot Sumeet Sabharwal's Ex Wife to Support Claims That He Had a Mental Illness to Make the Pilot a Scapegoat for the Fatal Air India Plane Crash

A Lot Went Wrong Even Before the AI171 Dreamliner's Take-Off on June 12th Last Year, Here's The Timeline

India's Emigrant Epidemic: From 1,000 AQI to Water Crisis--Reasons Rich People are Leaving India

Nurse's Suicide Sparks Protest in Rajasthan, Govt Assures Job to Kin