Cameral Analysis: A Method of Treating the Psychoneuroses Using HypnosisPsychology Press, 1994 - 222 pages Former Harley Street consultant David Pedersen shows how hypnosis can be used as an alternative to drug therapy in a wide range of patients. Cameral Analysis shows how the neurophysiological division of the brain into two separate hemispheres may account for the symptoms of psychoneurotic behaviour. Using hypnosis, the two halves of the brain can be made to function as a whole once more, curing these distressing symptoms without the side effects of costly drug therapies. |
Table des matières
A brief history of hemispheric lateralization | 19 |
The relationship between hypnosis and the right | 26 |
Evidence for the hypnotic state as a right | 52 |
Practical applications | 67 |
The case history of Mrs Susan X | 156 |
Notes | 206 |
215 | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
able abreaction activity age regression Akstein anxiety art form became become behaviour body-language cameral analysis cerebral hemispheres child clinical concept conflict consciousness considered corpus callosum cortex developed dissociation doctor dream emotional exams experience explain fantasy father feeling felt Freud Gazzaniga hand hemi hemisphere function hemisphere person hemisphere's hospital human husband hypnosis Hypnotic susceptibility hypnotizability incident individual inhibition interhemispheric interpretation involved Jane latent content later left hemi left hemisphere limbic system logical London look mechanism Medicine memory mental method mind mode multiple personality neocortex neomammalian neurological neuroses never non-verbal normal occurred origin paleomammalian Pamela panic attacks poem poetry possible problem Professor psychiatry Psychology repressed result right brain right hemi right hemisphere Roger Sperry sexual Sperry Sperry's sphere split-brain split-brain patient stimulus suggested Susan symptoms task theory therapeutic therapist therapy totally trance treatment words