Dr Graham Jamieson

Lecturer, School of Behavioural, Cognitive and Social Sciences
Qualifications
PhD (UQ), MSc, BScHons
Contact
| Email: | gjamieso@une.edu.au |
| Room: | S5-6 Room 42 |
| Phone: | 02 6773 4279 (or +61 2 6773 4279 overseas) |
| Fax: | 02 6773 3820 |
Areas of Teaching
Research interests
Cognitive-neuroscience of executive control; Hypnosis and conscious states
Representative Publications
Books
Jamieson, G.A. (Ed). (2007). Hypnosis and Conscious States: The Cognitive-Neuroscience Perspective. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Book Chapters
Jamieson, (in press). Hypnosis. In Bayne, T., Cleermans, A. & Wilken, P. (Eds) The Oxford Companion to Consciousness. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Jamieson, G.A. & Hasegawa, H. (2007). Hypnosis research: Building bridges between explanatory domains. In G.A. Jamieson (Ed). Hypnosis and Conscious States: The Cognitive-Neuroscience Perspective. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp 133-144.
Jamieson, G.A., (2007). Previews and prospects for the cognitive-neuroscience of hypnosis and conscious states. In G.A. Jamieson (Ed). Hypnosis and Conscious States: The Cognitive-Neuroscience Perspective. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp 1-11.
Jamieson, G.A., & Woody, E. (2007). Dissociated control as a paradigm for cognitive-neuroscience research and theorising in hypnosis. In G.A. Jamieson (Ed). Hypnosis and Conscious States: The Cognitive-Neuroscience Perspective. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp111-129.
Journal Articles
Hutchinson-Phillips, S., Gow, K., & Jamieson, G.A. (2007). Hypnotizability, Eating Behaviors, Attitudes and Concerns: A Literature Survey. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 55.
Egner, T., Jamieson, G.A. & Gruzelier, J.H. (2005). Hypnosis decouples cognitive control from conflict monitoring processes of the frontal lobe. Neuro Image, 27, 969-978.
Hutchinson-Phillips, S., Jamieson, G.A. & Gow, K. (2005). Differing roles of imagination and dissociation in the self-regulation of eating behaviour. Contemporary Hypnosis, 22, 171-183.
Jamieson, G.A. (2005). The Modified Tellegen Absorption Scale: A clearer window on the structure and meaning of absorption. Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 33, 119-139.
Jamieson, G.A., Dwivedi, P. & Gruzelier, J.H. (2005). Changes in Mismatch Negativity in hypnosis: Left frontal versus global anterior inhibition. Brain Research Bulletin, 67, 298-303.
Vaitl, D. Birbaumer, N., Gruzelier, J., Jamieson, G. A., Kotchoubey, B., Kubler, A., Lehmann, D., Miltner, W.H. Ott, U., Putz, P., Sammer, G., Strauch, I., Strehl, U., Wackermann, J., Weiss, T. (2005). Psychobiology of altered states of consciousness. Psychological Bulletin, 131, 98-127.
Gruzelier, J. De Pascalis, V., Jamieson, G., Laidlaw, T., Naito, A., Bennett, B. & Dwivedi, P. (2004). Relations between hypnotisability and psychopathology revisited. Contemporary Hypnosis, 21, 169-170.
Jamieson, G.A., Sheehan, P.W. (2004). An empirical test of Woody and Bowers dissociated control theory of hypnosis. International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 52, 232-249.
Hasegawa, H. & Jamieson, G.A. (2002). Conceptual issues in hypnosis theory and research: Explanation, definition and the state/non-state debate. Contemporary Hypnosis, 19, 103-117.
Jamieson, G. A. & Sheehan, P.W. (2002). A critical evaluation of the relationship between sustained attentional abilities and hypnotic susceptibility. Contemporary Hypnosis, 19, 62-74.
Jamieson, G. A. & Gruzelier, J. H. (2001). Hypnotic susceptibility is positively related to a subset of schizotypy items. Contemporary Hypnosis, 18, 32-37.
Sheehan, P.W., Statham, D. & Jamieson, G.A. (1991). Pseudomemory effects and their relationship to level of susceptibility to hypnosis and state instruction. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 60, 130-137.
Sheehan, P.W., Statham, D. & Jamieson, G.A. (1991). Pseudomemory effects over time in the hypnotic setting. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 100, 39-44.
Sheehan, P.W., Statham, D., Jamieson, G.A. & Ferguson, S.R. (1991). Ambiguity in suggestion and the occurrence of pseudomemory in the hypnotic session. Australian Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, 19, 1-18.
