NOVEMBER 2010/MAY 2011 Volumes 38 Number 2 & 39 Number 1, Article 5
The Role of Absorption, Fantasy Proneness and Hypnosis in Response to Trauma
Natasha M. Loi and Graham A. Jamieson, University of New England
Detachment and compartmentalisation are frequently reported features of psychological reactions to trauma. We propose that these responses are the result of changes in two distinct but reciprocally active neuronal systems of self-regulatory control. The former is linked to affective and experiential self-regulation and the latter to cognitive and behavioural self-regulation. Detachment and compartmentalisation are neither intrinsically negative nor positive. Each is a process which carries with it a discrete set of potentials for self-regulation which in turn closes off access to an alternative set of conscious cognitive self-regulatory strategies. Compartmentalisation results from the disengagement of networks of volitional control. Detachment may be invoked by absorption in inner-generated experiences, a process equivalent to hypnosis, through which individuals may learn to regain control of the shifts between the two modes of self-regulation as contexts and circumstances require.
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