Highly hypnotizable people
~10–15% of the population measurable, stable trait
Psychology & Neuroscience
Stage hypnotists make people cluck like chickens. Therapists use it for chronic pain, PTSD, and smoking cessation. Brain imaging shows something real happening. But what, exactly?
Yes hypnosis is real, but not in the way movies depict it. Brain imaging studies show hypnosis produces distinct, measurable changes in brain activity. However, hypnotized people are not unconscious, not under anyone's 'control,' and not doing things against their will. About 10–15% of people are highly hypnotizable; around 20% are very resistant.

Highly hypnotizable people
~10–15% of the population measurable, stable trait
What brain scans show
Reduced activity in the default mode network; altered salience and executive networks
Clinical evidence
Strong evidence for hypnotherapy in pain management, IBS, PTSD, and smoking cessation
The control myth
Hypnotized people cannot be made to act against core values they remain capable of refusal
Self-hypnosis
All hypnosis is technically self-hypnosis the hypnotist guides, but the subject generates the state
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