2018
DOI: 10.1093/nc/niy006
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The Sussex-Waterloo Scale of Hypnotizability (SWASH): measuring capacity for altering conscious experience

Abstract: The ability to respond to hypnotic suggestibility (hypnotizability) is a stable trait which can be measured in a standardized procedure consisting of a hypnotic induction and a series of hypnotic suggestions. The SWASH is a 10-item adaptation of an established scale, the Waterloo-Stanford Group C Scale of Hypnotic Suggestibility (WSGC). Development of the SWASH was motivated by three distinct aims: to reduce required screening time, to provide an induction which more accurately reflects current theoretical und… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(103 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
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“…Given that implicit measures have often been developed with ownership in mind, this should not be surprising, even if the illusion is entirely a suggestion effect. Note that the discovery of substantial relationships between response to imaginative suggestion and the RHI considerably extends the range of effects with which RHI illusion reports would be likely to correlate, if experimental demand characteristics suggested them (e.g., paralysis, amnesia, hallucinations, involuntary movement, analgesia, etc; see Lush et al, 2018 for SWASH hypnotisability scale suggestions).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Given that implicit measures have often been developed with ownership in mind, this should not be surprising, even if the illusion is entirely a suggestion effect. Note that the discovery of substantial relationships between response to imaginative suggestion and the RHI considerably extends the range of effects with which RHI illusion reports would be likely to correlate, if experimental demand characteristics suggested them (e.g., paralysis, amnesia, hallucinations, involuntary movement, analgesia, etc; see Lush et al, 2018 for SWASH hypnotisability scale suggestions).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite this, response varies reliably for different types of suggestion (perhaps reflecting differing cognitive requirements; Woody & Barnier, 2008). For example, 77% of participants respond to a suggestion that their hands will be drawn together as though they were magnets, but only around 26% respond to auditory and tactile hallucination of a suggested mosquito (see Lush et al, 2018). Mean subjective report is consequently greater for the moving hands suggestion than for the mosquito suggestion, but this should not be interpreted as evidence there is a 'real' magnet effect which is not attributable to suggestion.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants. We recruited 78 participants from which 57 (mean age = 19.61, SD = 1.47, females = 51) had been screened for hypnotisability with the Sussex-Waterloo Scale of Hypnotisability (SWASH; Lush, Moga, McLatchie & Dienes, 2018). As we specified in the pre-registration, we excluded the data of those who did not have a SWASH score from all of the analyses.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further measurement advances include the development of scales that can be quickly administered in clinical and experimental contexts (Elkins, 2014;Lush et al, 2018;Pekala et al, 2010;Spiegel & Spiegel, 1978) or online (Palfi et al, 2019;Wieder & Terhune, 2019).…”
Section: [Figure 1 About Here]mentioning
confidence: 99%