Neurophysiological Correlates of Dissociation Induced by Virtual Reality Hypnosis.

Authors
Category Primary study
Registry of Trialsclinicaltrials.gov
Year 2022
Hypnosis and virtual reality are potential tools in treating acute pain. Nevertheless, the neurophysiological correlates of such tools used together, i.e. \'virtual reality hypnosis\' (VRH) (Patterson et al., 2004) remain mostly understudied. This study aims to improve our knowledge and understanding of the dissociation (i.e., a mental separation of components of behaviours that normally would be processed together) occurring during VRH. This is a randomized controlled study that will be conducted on healthy participants. As the final goal is to propose such a tool in the clinical context, a clinical application will also be carried out subsequently. Thus the principal outcome is to study dissociation in the context of VRH from a behavioral and neurophysiological point of view. Secondary objectives aim at identifying factors that influence the dissociative effect seen in VRH, as well as measuring traits of hypnotisability, absorption, immersive abilities, dissociation trait and state, pain, and anxiety levels that might impact the effectiveness of such a tool.
Epistemonikos ID: 0dcee67e68148c5765f1f830c438e1a2d26b8e8e
First added on: May 13, 2024