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  2. Stage hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stage_hypnosis

    None of these tricks requires any hypnosis or suggestion, but depend purely on physical manipulation and audience deception. The most famous example of this type is the "human plank" trick, which involves making a subject's body become rigid (cataleptic) and suspending them horizontally between two chairs, at which point the hypnotist will ...

  3. Hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnosis

    Hypnosis has been used as a supplemental approach to cognitive behavioral therapy since as early as 1949. Hypnosis was defined in relation to classical conditioning; where the words of the therapist were the stimuli and the hypnosis would be the conditioned response. Some traditional cognitive behavioral therapy methods were based in classical ...

  4. Does hypnosis really work? - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/does-hypnosis-really-heres...

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  5. Mentalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mentalism

    Pre-show work can take a number of forms. One type involves the mentalist talking to a spectator whom he will later, during his performance, involve in one of his effects. In this case the mentalist sets up the trick by covertly obtaining information from the spectator which he will later reveal during the performance.

  6. Hypnotic induction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypnotic_induction

    James Braid in the nineteenth century saw fixing the eyes on a bright object as the key to hypnotic induction. [3]A century later, Sigmund Freud saw fixing the eyes, or listening to a monotonous sound as indirect methods of induction, as opposed to “the direct methods of influence by way of staring or stroking” [4] —all leading however to the same result, the subject's unconscious ...

  7. Covert hypnosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covert_hypnosis

    Covert hypnosis is a phenomenon not too different from indirect hypnosis, as derived from Milton H. Erickson and popularized as "The Milton Model" [10] in style, [11] but the defining feature is that the hypnotized individual subsequently engages in hypnotic phenomena without conscious effort or choice.

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