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This rather lengthy and technical Article is a Bibliography
Summarizing Scientific Studies of Subliminal Research. This article
is intended for those who have requested scientific evidence of
the phenomena of subliminal perception. We have not made any attempt
to editorialize or form conclusions. All the comments in this article
are direct quotations from the studies themselves reported in their
respective journals all of which can be found in any university
research libraries.
Although the language is at times technical, you
will find that the more than 60 studies reviewed, and many more
referenced, give clinical and scientific validation for the existence
and effects of subliminal stimulation, proving that the mind does
receive and process information which is not consciously perceived.
There are many hundreds of other studies available in scientific
journals on subliminal perception. For a more general article on
Subliminal Perception see our article on this subject.
Ariam, S. and Siller, J. Effects of Subliminal Oneness
Stimuli in Hebrew on Academic Performance of Israeli High School
Students: Further Evidence on the Adaptation-Enhancing effects of
Symbiotic Fantasies in Another Culture Using Another Language. Journal
of Abnormal Psychology, 1982, 91 (5), 343-349.
The relation between unconscious symbiotic fantasies
(the experience of partial merging of self and object representation)
and adaptive behavior (mathematics improvement) in a non-English-speaking
culture (Israel) was studied in an attempt to determine both the
replicability of previous findings and its status as a more general
human phenomenon rather than as an artifact of a particular language
of culture. Following Silverman's procedures, 10th grade students
in 4 groups of 18 each (matched for sex, mathematics class, and
previous math grades) were tachistoscopically presented with subliming
exposures of on of 4 Hebrew translations of verbal stimuli: Mommy
and I are one (two versions); My teacher and I are one; and a neutral
stimulus, People are walking in the street. Each subject received
subliminal stimulation four times a week, over a period of 6 weeks.
Achievement tests administered 6 weeks apart showed that groups
exposed to either version of Mommy and I are one was superior to
the other. Neither version of Mommy and I are one was superior to
the other. The results are seen as lending support to the hypothesis
that the adaptation-enhancing effect of the symbiotic fantasy represents
a general human phenomenon. (p. 343)
The presence of unconscious libidinal and
aggressive fantasies and their importance for human functioning
has been a cornerstone of psychoanalytic thinking since its very
inception. (p. 343)
In the course of the past 15 years, there
have been over 50 studies carried out in a variety of laboratories
demonstrating that subliminally presented fantasy-activating stimuli
can affect behavior in ways that subliminally presented neutral
control stimuli cannot (summarized in Silverman, 1982b). Moreover,
in several of these studies the supraliminal (10 sec) presentation
of the same fantasy stimuli has not had this effect. This is consistent
with psychoanalytic theory that maintains that the effects of libidinal
and aggressive fantasies on behavior can be dissipated if these
fantasies are made conscious. (p. 344)
The major finding of this study was that
the 4-msec exposure of both a literal and idiomatic Hebrew translation
of Mommy and I are one enhanced the mathematics ability of Israeli
high-school students. These results are consistent with the findings
of studies with varied populations (summarized in Silverman, 1982b),
indicating that this intervention can bring about positive behavior
change. (pp., 347-348)
Beisgen, R.T., Jr., and Gibby, R. G., Jr., Autonomic
and Verbal Discrimination of a Subliminally Learned Task. Perceptual
and Motor Skills, 1969, 29, 503-507.
The major findings in this study support
the existence of a subliminal process as defined by Lazarus and
McCleary (1951) and also strongly suggest that conditioning can
take place on an unconscious or subliminal level. (p. 507).
Borgeat, F., Chabot, R. and Chaloult, L. Subliminal
Perception and Levels of Activation. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry,
1981, 26 (4), 255-259.
Evaluated the influence of auditory subliminal
messages on the level of activation evaluated through a double-blind
study. 20 SS (mean age 28.7 yrs) were alternately submitted to activating
and deactivating subliminal messages. Activation changes were estimated
through the variations in Mood Adjective Check List scores. Five
of 6 test factors concerned with the content of subliminal messages
responded differently according to the nature of these messages;
4 factors were statistically significant. Results indicate that
auditory subliminal perceptions influenced the level of activation.
It is concluded that the parameters regulating subliminal response
and susceptibility remain largely undefined and in need of systematic
investigation. (p. 255)
Borgeat, F., M.D., Elie, R., M.D., Chaloult, L.,
M.D., and Chabot, R. B. Ped. Psychophysiological Responses to Masked
Auditory Stimuli. Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, Feb. 1985, 30,
22-27.
Verbal stimuli, masked by a 40-dB white noise, were
presented to the subject at increasing intensities by increments
of 5 dB starting at 0 dB. At each increment, frontal EMG, skin conductance
and heart rate were recorded. The data were submitted to analyses
of variance and covariance. Psychophysiological responses to stimuli
below the thresholds of identification and detection were observed.
The instruction not to attend the stimuli modified the patterns
of physiological responses. The effect of the affective content
of the stimuli on responses was stronger when not attending. The
results show the possibility of Psychophysiological responses to
masked auditory stimuli and suggests that Psychophysiological parameters
can constitute objective and useful measures for research in auditory
subliminal perception. (p. 22)
Borgeat, F., M.D., and Goulet, J. Psychophysiological
Changes Following Auditory Subliminal Suggestions for Activation
and Deactivation. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1983, 56, 759-766.
This study was to measure eventual Psychophysiological
changes resulting from auditory subliminal activation or deactivation
suggestions. 18 subjects were alternately exposed to a control situation
and to 25-dB activating and deactivating suggestions masked by a
40-dB white noise. Physiological measures (EMG), heart rate, skin-conductance
levels and responses, and skin temperature) were recorded while
subjects listened passively to the suggestions, during a stressing
task that followed and after that task. Multivariate analysis of
variance showed a significant effect of the activation subliminal
suggestions during and following the stressing task. This result
is discussed as indicating effects of consciously unrecognized perceptions
on Psychophysiological responses. (p. 759)
Bornstein, R.F, Leone, D.R. and Galley, D.J. The
Generalizability of Subliminal Mere Exposure Effects: Influence
of Stimuli Perceived Without Awareness on Social Behavior. Journal
of Personality and Social Psychology, 1987, 53 (6), 1070-1079.
This article describes three experiments
investigating the extend to which subliminal exposure effects are
obtainable not only with simple stimuli but also with complex human
stimuli in social situations. In the first experiment, undergraduate
subjects were exposed to slides of abstract geometric figures at
both subliminal (i.e., 4 ms) and supraliminal exposure durations.
Subjects' attitudes toward the subliminally presented stimuli became
significantly more positive with repeated exposures, even when subjects
were unaware that exposures had occurred. Experiment 2 demonstrated
that similar attitude changes are produced by subliminal exposure
to photographs of actual persons. The results of Experiment 3 indicate
that attitudes toward persons encountered in the natural environment
of the psychology experiment are also enhanced by subliminal exposure
to a photograph of that person. (p. 1070).
Brandeis, D. and Lehmann, D. Event-Related Potentials
of the Brain and Cognitive Processes: Approaches and Applications.
Neurophychologia, 1986, 24 (1), 151-168
Event-related potentials (ERPs) are recordings of
the electric field which the brain produces in fixed time-relation
to an even. ERPs open a time and space window onto covert steps
of brain information processing which need not be accompanied by
overt behavior or private experience. ERPs are the only noninvasive
method which resolves the dynamic pattern of events in the human
brain down to the millisecond range. (p. 151)
Examples of spatial analysis have shown that
different ERP field configurations follow the presentation of noun
and verb meaning of homophone words; that the ERP effects to subjective
contours resemble those to attention in time course and topography;
that the â€cognitive' P300 component reflects the
specific stimulus location; and that subliminal information influences
the configuration of late ERP fields. (p. 151)
Brosgole, L. and Contino, A.F. Intrusion of Subthreshold
Learning Upon Later Performance. Psychological Reports, 1973, 32,
795-798.
In serial learning experiments responses
were analyzed to specify types of intrusions. Materials from the
past interfered with performance. The greatest proportion of these
materials were only partially learned, thereby supporting a continuity
position. (p. 795)
This finding strongly supports the continuity position
by demonstrating that subthreshold learning may overtly interfere
with subsequent performance. (p. 796).
Bryant-Tuckett, R. and Silverman, L.H. Effects of
the Subliminal Stimulation of Symbiotic Fantasies on the Academic
Performance of Emotionally handicapped Students. Journal of Counseling
Psychology, 1984, 31 (3), 295-305.
Sixty-four emotionally disturbed adolescents at
a residential treatment school were divided into an experimental
and control group, matched for age, IQ, and reading ability. Both
groups were seen five times a week for 6 weeks for tachistoscopic
exposures of a subliminal stimulus. (p. 295).
In keeping with the hypothesis the experimental
subjects manifested significantly greater improvement on a California
Achievement Reading Test than did the controls. ON five of six secondary
variablesâ€arithmetic achievement, self-concept,
the handing in of homework assignments, independent classroom functioning,
and self-imposed limits on television viewing the experimental subjects
also showed better adaptive functioning. These findings, together
with the results of three earlier studies, indicate that the activation
of unconscious symbiotic fantasies can increase the effectiveness
of counseling and teachings. (p. 295)
In one group of studies, stimuli intended
to arouse unconscious wishes were presented to many populations,
including adult male schizophrenics (e.g., Leiter, 1982; Litwack,
Wiedemann, & Yager, 1979; Silverman & Spiro, 1967), depressives
(e.g., Miller, 1973; Rutstein & Goldberger, 1973), stutterers
(Silverman, Bronstein & Mendelsohn, 1976; Silverman, Klinger,
Lustbader, Farrell & Martin, 1972), and male homosexuals (Silverman,
Kwawer, Wolitzky, & Coron, 1973; Silverman et al., 1976), and
intensifications of the behavior under study were noted that were
not in evidence after the subliminal exposure of neutral stimuli.
These results have been seen as supporting psychoanalytic formulations
concerning the relations between oral aggressive wishes and ego
pathology in schizophrenia, aggressive wishes and depressive reactions,
anal wishes, and stuttering, and incestuous wishes and male homosexuality.
(Silverman, 1976). (p. 295)
Three recently completed investigations (Ariam,&
Siller, 1982; Parker, 1982; Zuckerman, 1980) have extended the application
of the subliminal psychodynamic activation method to study academic
performance and yielded results directly relevant to the present
investigation. These studies have tested the hypothesis that activating
unconscious fantasies of symbiotic gratification will increase the
effectiveness of counseling and teaching and thus enhance academic
performance. (p. 296).
Briefly, the results of the three academic
performance studies were as follows: Parker (1982) exposed matched
groups of undergraduate college students, enrolled in a business
law course and receiving weekly counseling sessions, to subliminal
stimulation at the start of each class, four times a week during
a 6-week summer school session. As in previous studies, the experimental
group received Mommy and I are one and the control group received
People are walking with the subjects being told that the subliminal
exposures were intended to enhance their academic performance. Parker
found that the final exam grades of the experimental students were
significantly higher than those of the controls. Ariam and Siller
(1982) used the same design involving classroom teaching and counseling
with a population of 10th grade students in a mathematics class
in Israel, having translated the subliminal stimuli in Hebrew. Two
groups receiving Mommy and I are one (a literal translation for
one group and an idiomatic translation for another) obtained significantly
higher final exam grades than did the control group. (pp. 296-297)
As we predicted, repeated exposures of the
subliminal stimulus led to improvement in CAT reading scores in
a sample of emotionally disturbed adolescents. (p. 300).
Could the difference in the post experimental
behavior of the experimental and control groups be explained in
some other way than to attribute them to the differential content
of the two messages? We do not believe there is any credible alternative
explanation. Recall that (a) the procedure was carried out with
double-blind controls, which protected against subject expectations
and experimenter bias and (b) the experimental and control groups
were no different in age, sex, race, psychiatric diagnosis, IQ,
and initial CAT reading scores. Because there is no reason to believe
there were systematic differences in the experiences of the two
groups had in the school during the 6-week intervention period (see
footnote 5), one can assume that only the differences in the subliminal
messages can account for the post-experimental behavior of the two
groups. (p. 301).
The improvement in academic functioning achieved
by the subjects exposed to the oneness stimulus was substantial.
Whereas CAT Reading scores of control subjects increased 6 months
in a 1-year people (according to the principal, this is about average
for students at the school), the scores for the experimental subjects
increased by 2 years 6 months, a difference of 2 full years. The
magnitude of this improvement suggests that when particular conditions
are met…the intervention can markedly benefit
academic performance. (p. 302).
For now we will simply limit ourselves to
the conclusion that what is clear from the current study, especially
when considered in conjunction with almost a dozen others (summarized
in Silverman, Lachmann & Milich, 1982), is that the activation
of unconscious symbiotic fantasies can increase the effectiveness
of interventions used by counselors, teachers, and psychotherapists.
(p. 304).
Charman, D.K., An Examination of Relationship between
Subliminal Perception, Visual Information Processing, Levels of
Processing and Hemispheric Asymmetries. Perceptual and Motor Skills,
1979, 49, 451-455.
A subliminal letter was exposed to the left
or right hemisphere for either 15 or 20 msec. Subjective guesses
were more accurate for visuo-spatial positional recognition made
to presentations in the right hemisphere whereas verbal recognition
was more accurate to presentations in the left hemisphere. The 30-msec
exposure increased the accuracy of the guesses. These findings were
discussed in terms of differential triggering mechanism for levels
of hemispheric processing. (p. 451).
Cook, H., Ph.D. Effects of Subliminal Symbiotic
Gratification and the Magic of Believing on Achievement. Psychoanalytic
Psychology, 1985, 2 (4), 365-371.
The present experiment examined the effect
of a subliminally presented symbiotic gratification and a magic
of believing message on academic achievement. Graduate students
were randomly assigned to one of the two experimental message conditions,
or to a control message condition, and received on the average 12
sessions, 10 exposures per session, of 4-msec visual subliminal
presentations of one of the three messages. Each session occurred
immediately prior to a lecture in either a statistics or a measurement
class. Each of the courses was taught in a traditional manner by
the regular faculty, who were naïve regarding the experimental
conditions. Objective final examinations for each course revealed
statistically significant differences in favor of the symbiotic
gratification experimental condition over the control condition.
No difference were obtained between the symbiotic and magic of believing
conditions. Research and clinical implications of the findings are
also explored. (p. 369).
The results of the present study provide
additional evidence of the effectiveness of the subliminally presented
symbiotic gratification message in facilitating academic achievement.
(p. 369)
It seems that stimulating students subliminally
to perhaps feel better about themselves (self -enhancing) may enable
them to learn more effectively. (P. 369).
Cuperfain, R. and Clarke, T. A New Perspective of
Subliminal Perception. Journal of Advertising, 1985, 14 (1), 36-41.
Tested a model of subliminal stimulation
based on studies of information processing by the right hemisphere.
Differences between the hemispheres in the way they process partial
information are outlined. College students viewed a film concerning
woolen-clothing soaps that did or did not have a subliminal message
(5 tachistoscopic presentations to the left visual field of a picture
of 1 or 2 products). One product was widely available at the time,
while the other was only advertised on cable TV. Each subliminal
presentation lasted for 1/60th of 1 second. After the film, Ss completed
a questionnaire that asked them to random order 5 soaps for fine
clothing and to provide demographic information. Results indicate
that the subliminal messages did have an impact on state preference
for the highly advertised, widely available product, but not for
the relatively unknown product. Demographic variables were not significant.
It is suggested that academic marketers may have been too quick
to discount the ability of subliminal presentations to affect consumer
decision making. Implications for advertising and hemispheric specialization
studies are noted. (p. 36)
Dauber, R.B. Subliminal Psychodynamic Activation
in Depression: On the Role of Autonomy Issues in Depressed College
Women. Journal of Abnormal Psychology. 1984, 93 (1), 9-18.
Two experiments used the subliminal psychodynamic
activation method to study the effects of messages related to autonomy
on depressed college women identified by Beck Depression Inventory
scores. (p. 9)
Considering both experiments together, the solid
finding that emerged is that the message Leaving Mom is wrong increased
depressive feelings in depressed college women on the DACL. (p.
16).
The results of the two experiments yielded
by the message Leaving Mom is wrong should be considered together
with a finding reported by Schmidt (1981), who conducted a subliminal
psychodynamic activation study shortly after the current investigation
was completed…He (Schmidt) found that a group
of such subjects responded with increased depression after the subliminal
presentation of the message I have been bad (when contrasted with
a subliminal neutral-control message), whereas another group of
depressed students who did not score high on Blats's introjective
depression scale were not affected by this message. (pp. 16-17).
Reference to Schmidt, J.M. The Effects of Subliminally
Presented Anaclitic And Introjective Stimuli on Normal Young Adults.
Unpublished doctoral dissertation, 1981, University of Southern
Mississippi. (p. 18).
Dixon, N. the Conscious-Unconscious Interface: Contributions
to an Understanding. Archiv-Fur-Psychologie, 1983, 135 (1), 55-66.
Suggests that whatever the paradigm in which
unconscious perception is brought about and whatever the research
context in which these paradigms are used, there is hardly a single
finding from subliminal perception, microgenesis, and sleep and
dream research that does not implicate 2-way interaction between
sensory inflow, emotional appraisal, and the unconscious memory-storage
systems of the human brain. Data from different areas of research
are reviewed to develop a flow model to explain how physiological
events in the brain give rise to representations in the mind. The
model depicts conditions for achieving conscious representations
of sensory inflow, which include physical, physiological, and mental
factors; whatever the mechanism through which the transition from
physiological to phenomenal representation is achieved, it is potentially
sensitive to these 3 factors. The model also encompasses consciousness
and energy; temporal parameters of consciousness; and the ubiquity
of subliminal effects across receptors, sensory dimensions, and
modalities. (p. 55),/P>
Emrich, H. and Heinemann, L. G. EEG bei-unterschwelliger
Wahrnehmung emotional bedeutsamer Worter. Psychologische Forchung,
January 1966, 29, 285-296.
Emotional and neutral words slowly becoming
visible with increasing brightness on a translucent screen wee observed
by 16 healthy subjects whose electroencephalograms and electrocardiograms
were continuously recorded. They had to signalize the appearance
of light, the visibility of contours or letters, the moment when
they could guess a word, and the moment when the word was plainly
visible. (p. 295).
In a far subliminal range already significant differences
were found between emotional and neutral words in EEG and ECG. Taking
into consideration similar findings by other authors an absolute
threshold is postulated; the threshold of conscious perception (1st
signal) is higher and inconstant. During the exposition of emotional
words the abundance of alpha waves was higher. The ECG differences
disappeared in the supraliminal range. (p. 295)
Fisher, S. Effects of Messages Reported to Be Out
of Awareness Upon the Body Boundary. The Journal of Nervous and
Mental Disease 1975, 161 (2), 90-99.
How many one sum up the results from the
multiple studies? First of all, it is clear that all of the out-of-awareness
taped messages which were appropriately primed produced a decrement
in boundary definiteness in men.…
…It should be noted that
while a majority of studies by others have found a priming procedure
a necessary preliminary to obtaining an effect with a stimulus out
of awareness, thee have been instance reported where an effect appeared
without priming. (p. 96) <.P>
Frauman, D. C., Lynn, S.J., Hardaway, R. and Molteni,
A. Effect of Subliminal Symbiotic Activation on Hypnotic Rapport
and Susceptibility. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1984, 93 (4),
481-483.
A double-blind design was utilized in which
subjects of high, medium and low hypnotic susceptibility received
either the symbiotic stimulus Mommy and I are one or the psychodynamically
neutral stimulus People are walking. (Silverman, 1982), presented
tachistoscopically. (p. 481).
The significant multivariate effect indicates that
symbiotic fantasies had an impact on measures assumed to be relevant
to affective relationship factors in hypnosis. Our replication and
extension of Silverman's paradigm to the domain of hypnosis suggests
that hypnotized subjects are sensitive to stimuli that are out of
conscious awareness yet presumably related to historical and contemporary
experience. (p. 483).
Goncalves, O.F., Ivey, A.E. The Effects of Unconscious
Presentation of Information on Therapist Conceptualizations, Intentions,
and Responses. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1987, 43 92), 237-245.
This article presents a study of the effects
of tachistoscopic presentation of affective words on subjects' conceptualizations,
intentions, and responses to a simulated client. The participants,
36 counseling students were assigned randomly to one of the following
treatments: (1) subliminal presentation of negative emotional concepts;
(2) subliminal presentation of positive emotional concepts; (3)
supraliminal presentation of positive emotional concepts. After
the tachistoscopic presentations, all subjects were exposed to a
simulated client, whom they were asked to evaluate, respond to,
and report the cognitive intentions that guided their responses.
Significant effects were found in the subliminal presentation of
positive emotional concepts on subjects' conceptualizations, intentions,
and responses. Some significant effects also were found for the
supraliminal presentation, but only for the client evaluation measure.
(p. 237)
Groeger, J.A. Evidence of Unconscious Semantic Processing
From a Forced Error Situation. British Journal of Psychology, 1984,
75, 305-314.
A study was carried out to determine whether
subjects extracted information from words presented below their
recognition and awareness thresholds. A series of target words was
used to generate the word matrix, which was a set of 24 words related
to the target in specified ways. Following subthreshold exposure
of a target word, subjects chose the word they thought had been
shown from the word matrix for that particular target. It was held
that the alternative chosen was a function of the type of processing
the target was receiving. Results showed that structural analysis
of the target predominated below recognition threshold whereas semantic
analysis predominated below recognition threshold, whereas semantic
analysis redominated below awareness threshold. (p. 305)
The data presented appear to lend support
to the views of subliminal perception theorists, which suggest that
unconscious semantic processing does occur (p. 311).
Guthrie, G. and Wiener, M. Subliminal Perception
or Perception of Partial Cue With Pictorial Stimuli. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology, 1966, 3 (6), 619-628.
The results in all of the experiments suggest
that where pictorial stimuli are exposes at â€subliminal
levels, structural cues (lines, etc.) are the first information
available to the subject…. To the extent that
these findings scan be generalized to other investigations of subliminal
effects where pictorial stimuli were used, the part-cue response-characteristic
view remains a tenable explanation for these other studies as well.
It appears that the part-cue response-characteristic explanation
can account for the so-called subliminal effects without having
to invoke a special process which responds to different classes
of stimuli without the awareness of the subjects. (p. 627)
Hart, L. The Effect of Noxious Subliminal Stimuli
on the Modification of Attitudes Toward Alcoholism: A Pilot Study.
Br J. Addict., 1973, 68, 87-90.
In recent years there has been an increasing
body of evidence attempting to validate the hypothesis that subliminal
stimuli may affect behavior. Supposedly, a faint perceptual stimulus
may affect behavior even when this stimulus is below threshold.
Gudmund and his associated (1959) studied the effects of subliminal
verbal stimuli and reported that the difference between meanings
registered below a recognition threshold can affect conscious thoughts.
In an investigation of the effects of subliminal stimuli of aggressive
content upon conscious cognition, Eagle (1959) notes that stimuli
that are not conscious and that are non-aggressive affected subjects'
impressions of a consciously perceived stimulus. These findings
support the contention that stimuli which are not consciously perceived
or directly experienced can influence cognition.
This study was undertaken in an attempt to
investigate the effect of noxious subliminal stimuli on the modification
of attitudes toward alcoholism. (p. 87)
It was hypothesized that the programmed exposure
of noxious subliminal stimuli would modify attitudes toward alcoholism.
It may be concluded from the results of this study that a modification
of attitudes toward alcoholism did take place over a five-day period
for the experimental group. Over the same five-day period, there
was no significant difference in the attitudes toward alcoholism
on two separate administrations of the alcoholism questionnaire
for eh control group. These findings support the contention that
stimuli which are not consciously perceived or directly experienced
can influence attitudes. (p. 90)
Henley, S. Cross-modal Effects of Subliminal Verbal
Stimuli. Scand. J. Psychol., 1975, 16, 30-36.
Abstract: In a cross-modal version of an
experiment by Smith et al. (1959), the effects of subliminal auditory
cue words upon judgments of a supraliminal visual stimulus (a neutral
face) were examined. Support was found for the hypothesis that material
in an unattended channel is fully analyzed for meaning, and may
be integrated with material in an attended channel when it is relevant
to the ongoing task. Contrary to expectations, the effects of the
subliminal cues were found to carry over to trials on which the
face was presented without concurrent auditory stimulation, thus
providing support for the Poetzl phenomenon. (p. 30). .
There is nothing new in the finding that
a stimulus which bypasses awareness at the time of presentation
can influence subsequent behavior; many studies on the Poetzl phenomenon
(See Dixon, 1971) support this view, and in one experiment by Bokander
(1965), using the metacontrast technique, it has been shown that
the characteristics of masked facial photographs may serve to modify
descriptions of a neutral face presented later. The novelty of the
present results is that they imply not only that the components
of a random sequence of unattended (subthreshold) stimuli be stored
in the order in which they were presented, but that they should
subsequently re-emerge in the same order to aid performance in an
ongoing task. (p. 35).
Kaplan, R., Thornton, P. and Silverman, L., Further
Data on the Effects of Subliminal Symbiotic Stimulation on Schizophrenics.
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1985, 173 (11), 658-666.
Examined the effects of activating unconscious symbiotic
fantasies in 128 hospitalized schizophrenic men (aged 18-65 years)
who qualified as relatively differentiated on an adjective rating
scale and were randomly assigned to 4 groups. Each group was assessed
for pathological thinking, pathological nonverbal behavior, and
self-esteem before and after the subliminal exposure of an experimental
and control stimulus. The control stimulus for all groups was the
message, People are walking, and the experimental stimuli were the
messages, Mommy and I are one, Mommy is always with me, Mommy feeds
me well, and I cannot hurt Mommy (one for each group). One-half
of each group was subliminally exposed to verbal messages only and
one-half verbal messages accompanied by congruent pictures. The
1st stimulus (Mommy and I are one) was intended to activate unconscious
symbiotic fantasies that in a number of prior studies reduced pathology
in groups of relatively differentiated schizophrenics. The other
stimuli were intended to activate reassuring unconscious fantasies
about Mommy that were not specifically symbiosis-related. Only the
Mommy and I are one stimulus led to more adaptive behavior and did
so on all 3 dependent variables. This supported the supposition
that it is specifically symbiosis-related gratifications that re
ameliorative for schizophrenics.? (p. 658).
<b>Kaser, V.A. The Effects of an Auditory
Subliminal Message Upon the Production of Images and Dreams. Journal
of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1986, 174 (7), 397-407.
Investigated the effect that an auditory
subliminal message, produced by speeding up the rate at which it
was recorded, would have on the imagery and dreams of a group of
normal Ss (subjects). The auditory subliminal message was produced
by speeding up a message that was sung until it could not be consciously
understood. This message was mixed with a normal music recording
and played to 9 undergraduates in the experimental group. Nine controls
(primarily staff and student interns) heard the normal music recording
with without the subliminal message. Both groups were asked to produce
a pretest drawing before the tapes were played, and imagery drawing
immediately after the tapes were played, and a dream drawing of
any dreams they might have that night. Analysis of blind ratings
given to all the drawings by 2 art therapists indicated a significant
difference between the dream drawings and imagery drawings of the
experimental and the control group. When the drawings were examined,
the effect of the subliminal message could be seen. Findings suggest
that the unconscious/preconscious mind is able to perceive a recorded
verbal message that cannot be consciously understood... (p. 397)
Kemp-Wheeler, S.M. and Hill, A.B. Anxiety Responses
to Subliminal Experience of Mild Stress. British Journal of Psychology,
1987, 78, 365-374.
Two groups of undergraduates (n=14 in each) matched
for level of trait anxiety participated in the experiment. One group
(E)_ was presented with 20 â€emotional' words 10
percent below detection threshold while the other group (N) was
presented with 20 emotionally neutral words under the same conditions.
Ratings of several psychological variables were take before and
after stimulation and two psychophysiological measure, heart and
respiration rate, were also taken. (p. 365)
It is concluded that manifest anxiety and some features
of anxiety having somatic referents can be induced by subliminal
experience of mild stress. (p. 365).
Kihlstrom, J.F. The Cognitive Unconscious. Science,
1987, 237, 1445-1452.
Contemporary research in cognitive psychology
reveals the impact of nonconscious mental structures and processes
on the individual's conscious experience, thought, and action. Research
on perceptual-cognitive and motoric skills indicates that they are
automatized through experience, and thus rendered unconscious. In
addition, research on subliminal perception, implicit memory, and
hypnosis indicates that events can affect mental functions even
though they cannot be consciously perceived or remembered. These
findings suggest a tripartite division of the cognitive unconscious
into truly unconscious mental processes operating on knowledge structures
that may themselves be preconscious or subconscious. (p. 1445)
Kilbourne, W.E., Painton, S. and Ridley, D. The
Effect of Sexual Embedding on Responses to Magazine Advertisements.
Journal of Advertising, 1985, 14 (2), 48-55.
Conducted 2 empirical studies to assess the effectiveness
of sexual embedding (subliminal messages) in advertising. In Study
1, 424 undergraduates viewed and evaluated 2 advertisements (ads)
with embeds or 2 matched ads without embeds. Results indicate that
embedding was effective in raising attitudinal evaluations of a
liquor ad but not a cigarette ad. In Study 2, galvanic skin response
(GSR) measurements were taken on 36 undergraduates while they viewed
both versions (with and without embeds) of 2 ads. Results indicate
that embedding was effective in increasing GSR measurements for
the version of the ads with embeds. Results of both studies suggest
that the use of sexual embeds in magazine advertisements influences
viewers' evaluations of the ads. (p. 48).
Kleespies, P. and Wiener, M. The Orienting Reflex
as an Input Indicator in Subliminal Perception. Perceptual and Motor
Skills, 1972, 35, 103-110.
The results of this study indicate that measures
of first eye movements (frequency and latency) are effective measures
of visual input differences…Moreover, with a
subliminal exposure duration (3 msec.), it was found that there
are more first eye movements toward the stimuli in the first second
after stimulus presentation that in the sixth second after stimulus
presentation. (p. 109).
Kostandov, E.A. and Arzumanov, Y. L. The Influence
of Subliminal Emotional Words on Functional Hemispheric Asymmetry.
International Journal of Psychophysiology, 1986, 4, 143-147.
The P300 component of the evoked potential was recorded
over both hemispheres in order to study interhemispheric differences
in the process of perception of subliminal verbal stimuli. The stimuli
subliminal words, neutral and emotional were presented at random
to the left or right visual fields. In response to an unrecognized
emotional word, the amplitude of P300 wave increased diffusely over
both hemispheres as compared to that to a neutral word, with no
charges in interhemispheric differences. The interhemispheric difference
changed considerably in the presence of an â€unaccountable'
emotion caused by a subliminal word. This suggests unilateral activation
of the right hemisphere and a predominant role of this hemisphere
in the cortical organization of the unconscious function â€unaccountable'
emotion.' (p. 143).
Subliminal emotional words connected with the subject's
conflict situation evoke the P300 of significantly larger amplitude
than subliminal neutral words. The increase is generalized over
occipital and associative areas, and at the vertex. (p. 147).
This the study of relations between unconscious
mental phenomena and hemispheric functional asymmetry reveals two
aspects of the problem. Firstly, there are hemispheric relations
in the perception of subliminal emotions stimuli. Here we have not
found any peculiarities, and accordingly, we cannot speak about
a dominant or particular role of one hemisphere in the processing
of subliminal verbal information. Apparently â€perception
without awareness' is performed with both hemispheres acting in
cooperation and each one contributes to the whole function. Secondly,
there is the problem of hemispheric asymmetry after unrecognized
emotional verbal stimulation. The clearly functional asymmetry observed
in this case suggests the dominant role of the right hemisphere
in the forming of such an unconscious mental process as unaccountable
emotion. (p. 147). .
Kunzendorf, R.G., Lacouse, Pl, and Lynch. B. Hypnotic
Hypermnesia for Subliminally Encoded Stimuli: State-Dependent Memory
for â€Unmonitored' Sensations. Imagination, Cognition
and Personality, 1986-87, 6 (4), 365-377.
The present study tests the hypothesis that
subliminal perception and hypnotic perception are similarly encoded
â€altered states of perception.' (p. 365).
In this first experiment, hypnosis enhanced recognition
memory of subliminally encoded stimuli (1/100 sec faces), which
were not recognized before or after hypnosis. Moreover, in this
study as in two previous studies employing bias free recognition
tests. (19, 20), hypnosis reduced recognition of consciously encoded
stimuli (1/10 sec faces), which were remembered at above-change
levels before and after hypnosis. These two state-specific effects
of hypnotic memory are perfectly consistent with our theoretical
position: that both subliminal sensations and hypnotic sensations
are unaccompanied by any self-monitoring, and self-awareness that
one is perceiving (rather than imaging) the sensations. (p. 370).
In experiment 2, as in Experiment 1, hypnosis
enhanced recognition memory of subliminally encoded stimuli (1/100
sec faces), which were not recognized before or after hypnosis.
Also in Experiment 2, as in Experiment 1 and in two previous studies,
hypnosis reduced recognition of consciously encoded stimuli (1/10
sec faces), which were remembered at above-chance levels before
hypnosis (19, 20). (p. 373).
LeClerc, C. and Freibergs, V.L. Influence d'Indices
Subliminaux Perceptifs et Symboliques sur la Formation d'un Concept.
Canad. J. Psychol./Rev. Canad. Psychol., 1971, 25 (4), 292-301.
The learning of a simple concept represented
by geometric figures was examined as a function of subliminal stimuli
of either a perceptual or a symbolic nature. Preceding each instance
of a concept, a subliminal stimulus indicating either the correct
or incorrect solution was presented by the technique of backward
masking. The results showed that only symbolic subliminal stimuli
were effective in influencing the learning of a concept, and this
particularly in the case where the correct solution was indicated.
It was concluded that the effect of a subliminal stimulus depends
on the degree of correspondence between the level of complexity
of he stimulus and that of the task. (p. 292).
Lee, I. And Tyrer, P. Responses of Chronic Agoraphobics
to Subliminal and Supraliminal Phobic Motion Pictures. The Journal
of Nervous and Mental Disease. 1980, 168 (1), 34-40.
Fifteen agoraphobics took part in a study to investigate
their responses to repeated presentations of a phobic motion picture.
Five patients were shown the film supraliminally, five were shown
it subliminally, and the remaining five formed a control group.
Subjective feelings were assessed with visual analogue scales, and
three physiological measures, heart rate, skin conductance, and
respiratory rate, were recorded. An earlier report showed that both
subliminal and supraliminal presentation produced significant improvements
in phobic fear and avoidance, and the present results show that
the subliminal group found the procedure much less stressful than
the supraliminal group. (p. 34).
Lee, I., Tyrer, P. and Horn, S., A comparison of
Subliminal, Supraliminal and Faded Phobic Cine-Films in the Treatment
of Agoraphobia. Brit. J. Psychiat., 1983, 143, 356-361.
Thirty-two agoraphobic patients were randomly allocated
to four groups and treated by repeated exposure to cine-films at
twice weekly intervals for three weeks. Three of the groups saw
the same cine-film, comprising a range of agoraphobic scenes, and
a control group saw a potter working on his wheel. The three groups
seeing the phobic cine-film included one who viewed it at an illumination
level below the visual threshold (subliminal group), one seeing
it under normal conditions (supraliminal group), and one which underwent
graduated exposure from subliminal to supraliminal viewing levels
as the study proceeded (faded group). The faded group showed significantly
greater improvement than the control groups and this improvement
was maintained over twelve weeks. (p. 353). .
Tyrer, Horn and Lee showed in 1978 that the
presentation of subliminal phobic cine-film can be effective in
reducing phobic behaviour. (P. 356).
One method of combining them is to use a
treatment programme in which the films shown in the first session
are fully subliminal and, with succeeding sessions, the illumination
level is progressively increased until the films are fully supraliminal
by the end of the treatment. This technique is normally referred
to as fading. (p. 356).
The results of the clinical assessments were similar
to those obtained by Tyrer et al. (1978), with both subliminal and
supraliminal groups producing marked improvements in phobic behaviour
and these improvements being maintained throughout follow up assessments.'
(p. 358).
Overall, the results from this experiment
support our earlier findings that both subliminal and supraliminal
presentation of phobic cine-films can be effective in reducing agoraphobic
behaviour, and that the two methods are similar in terms of their
efficacy. (p. 358).
Libet, B. Responses of Human Somatosensory Cortex
to Stimuli Below Threshold for Conscious Sensation. Science, 1967,
1597-1600.
Averaged evoked responses of somatosensory cortex,
recorded subdurally, appeared with stimuli (skin, vental posterolateral
nucleus, cortex) which were subthreshold for sensation. Such responses
were deficient in late components. Subthreshold stimuli could elicit
sensation with suitable repetition. The primary evoked response
was not sufficient for sensation. These facts bear on the problems
of neurophysiological correlates of conscious and unconscious experience,
and of â€subliminal perception.' (p. 1597).
In contrast to earlier indications our results
demonstrate that, when suitably recorded, cortical evoked potentials
are detectable with sensory inputs below the adequate level for
conscious sensation, even when the attention of the subject is directed
to the stimulus. (pp 1599-1600).
Mendelsohn, e. M. The Effects of Stimulating Symbiotic
Fantasies on Manifest Pathology in Schizophrenics. The Journal of
Nervous and mental Disease, 1981, 169 (9), 580-590.
This study was designed as a further investigation
of the ameliorative effects of stimulating a symbiotic stimulus
produced improvement on one of the measures of pathology, replicating
findings from previous studies…. (p. 580)
In numerous studies completed to date, the subliminal
presentation of psychodynamically relevant wish-related verbal and
pictorial stimuli have led to changes in severity of manifest psychopathology
presumably by activating whatever relevant unconscious conflicts
are salient for the subject at the time in a wide range of subject
populations (26). )p. 581).
It has further been demonstrated that such
effects do not occur when such stimuli are presented supraliminally
(21, 24). This is consistent with the psychoanalytic view that once
a conflictual wish becomes conscious its status as a contributor
to psychopathology may be compromised. For a fuller discussion of
this point, see Silverman (23). (p. 581).
Overbeeke, C.J. Changing the Perception of Behavioral
Properties by Subliminal Presentation. Perceptual and Motor Skills,
1986, 62, 255-258.
Experiments on subliminal perception of words
suggest that the behavioral properties rather than the physical
properties of the presented words determine the answer given. (pp.
255-256).
Subliminal means here that the subject can not report
whether a stimulus has been presented. Pictures instead of words
were used since the direct approach is mainly interested in structural
aspects of evens and not in semantic information procession. (p.
256).
Although the subjects in the reported experiment
cannot report whether a stimulus has been presented, the estimate
of age of the supraliminal stimulus can be influenced by the subliminal
one. (p. 258).
Palmatier, J.R., and Bornstein, P.H. Effects of
Subliminal Stimulation of Symbiotic Merging Fantasies on Behavioral
Treatment of Smokers. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease,
1980, 168 (12), 715-719.
The subliminal psychodynamic activation method was
used to enhance the efficacy of a behavior therapy approach to smoking
cessation. Thirty-four subjects received a 3-week, group-oriented,
multicomponent behavior therapy package aimed at smoking cessation.
(p. 715).
…the results revealed
that the subliminally exposed message differentially effected the
post-treatment smoking behavior of the experimental group. The results
were interpreted as evidence for a transference phenomena explanation
for the effectiveness of the behavioral treatment program. (p. 715)
The overall findings of the present investigation
extend the previous work of Silverman and his associates. They indicate
that the subliminal stimulation of a symbiotic merging fantasy (Mommy
and I are one), when repeated over a period of time and combined
with a treatment containing active components, ahs practical utility
in its own right. (p. 719).
Plumbo, R. and Gillman, I. Effects of Subliminal
Activation of Oedipal Fantasies on Competitive Performance. The
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1984, 172 (12), 737-741.
A subliminal psychodynamic activation experiment
was conducted in which the effects of five subliminal stimuli were
sought on the dart-throwing performance of male subjects. The stimuli
consisted of the following messages, each accompanied by a congruent
picture: Beating Dad is OK, Beating Dad is wrong, Beating him is
OK, Beating him is wrong, and People are walking. The first two
stimuli were intended to activate competitive motives within the
context of the Oedipus complex; the next two, competitive motives
outside that context; and the last was intended as a control stimulus.
Beating Dad is OK led to greater dart-throwing accuracy than each
of the other four conditions, which in turn did not differ from
each other. This finding replicated a result reported by Silverman,
L.H., Ross, D., Adler, J., and Lustig, D. (J. Abnormal. Psychol.,
87; 341-357, 1978) and is in keeping with the formulation that the
activation of oedipal motives can affect competitive performance.
Neither a subject variable (fear of success) nor the differential
effects of two experimenters was found to interact with stimulus
conditions in affecting dart scores. (p. 737).
Parker, K.A. Effects of Subliminal Symbiotic Stimulation
on Academic Performance: Further Evidence on the Adaptation-Enhancing
Effects of Oneness Fantasies. Journal of Counseling Psychology,
1982, 29 (1) 19-28.
Sixty college students were enrolled in an undergraduate
summer session law course with the experimenter-instructor for 6
weeks. In addition to the normal course of instruction, all subjects
received subliminal stimulation before 3 out of 5 lectures each
week, as well as before and after a 10-minute counseling session
with the experimenter. (p. 19).
The results indicated that both experimental groups
earned significantly higher grades than the control group. These
results were viewed as consistent with findings of earlier studies
on schizophrenics, insect phobics, obese women, and alcoholics which
indicated that the stimulation of oneness fantasies has an adaptation-enhancing
effect on behavior. (p. 19).
Sackeim, H.A., Packer, I.K. and Gur, R.C. Hemisphericity,
Cognitive Set, and Susceptibility to Subliminal Perception. Journal
of Abnormal Psychology, 1977, 86 (6), 624-630.
The results indicate that hemisphericity
and cognitive set interact in producing subliminal effects. Left
movers, or right-hemisphericity people, showed the subliminal effect
when encouraged to think in a holistic and intuitive fashion. This
effect was predicted. Surprisingly, right movers (left-hemisphericity
people) tended to show the subliminal effect when encouraged to
think in an organized and logical manner, indicating that hemisphericity
and cognitive set may be more mutually interdependent in affecting
susceptibility to subliminal stimulation than was originally expected.
(pp. 628-629).
Finally, the pattern of results obtained in this
study reinforces both the notions of subliminal perception and hemisphericity.
Any position that rejects the existence of either phenomenon would
be hard pressed to account for the obtained interaction. (p. 629).
Saegert, J. Another Look at Subliminal Perception.
Journal of Advertising Research, 1979, 19 (1), 55-57.
Reviews the research on subliminal perception that
has appeared in the marketing literature and summarizes some recent
clinical psychological research (L.H. Silverman, 1976) with patient
populations that suggests that the technique can stimulate unconscious
wishes. The practical implications of this research for marketing
are discussed. It is suggested that consideration of ethical questions
can be postponed unless and until marketing application can be empirically
demonstrated. (p. 55).
Schurtman, R., Palmatier, J.R. and Martin, E.S.
O the Activation of Symbiotic Gratification Fantasies as an Aid
in the Treatment of Alcoholics. The International Journal of the
Addictions, 1982, 17 (7), 1157-1174.
Seventy-two alcoholics being treated at Veritas
Villa were divided into an experimental and a control group. In
addition to the regular treatment program both groups received four
subliminal exposures of a verbal message in each of six sessions
over a 2-week period. The messages were Mommy and I are one (experimental)
and People are walking (control), administered under double-blind
conditions. In keeping with the main hypothesis, the experimental
Ss were rated as significantly more involved in treatment. In addition,
among the alcoholics who were more symptomatic to begin with, the
Mommy message, when contrasted with the control, lowered anxiety
and depression, enhanced self-concept, and reduced alcohol consumption
after a 3-month follow-up. (p. 1157).
Shevrin, H. Brain Wave Correlates of Subliminal
Stimulations, Unconscious Attention, Primary-and-Secondary-Process
Thinking and Repressiveness. Psychological Issue, 1973, 8 (2), Mono
(30), 56-87.
In this paper I will describe a series of
experiments which show, for the first time to my knowledge, a relationship
between the electrical activity of the brain in response to a stimulus
and unconscious thought processes involving attention, perception,
primary-process thinking, and repression. (p. 56).
This method draws upon two techniques, subliminal
stimulation and the cortical evoked response... (p. 56).
Out of this controversy the existence of
subliminal perception has emerged as a new scientific fact. This
conclusion was reached by Bevan (1964), an entirely nonanalytically
oriented psychologist and an accomplished experimentalist, on the
basis of his review of over 80 studies. (p. 57).
In a more recent comprehensive review and
analysis of research on subliminal perception, Dixon (1971) concluded
that the existence of subliminal perception has been demonstrated
in at least eight different contexts: dreams, memory, adaptation
level, conscious perception, verbal behavior, emotional responses,
drive-related behavior, and perceptual thresholds. (p. 57).
<b>Shevrin, H. Does the Averaged Evoked
Response Encode Subliminal Perception? Yes. A Reply to Schwartz
and Rem. Psychophysiology, 1975, 12 (4), 395-398.
An attempt by Schwartz and Rem (1975) to replicate
a series of studies by Shevrin and coworkers purporting to show
that the average evoked response encodes subliminal perception is
found to be limited as are replication in a number of ways. Despite
substantial departures in method and procedures Schwartz and Rem
report a potentially confirmatory finding: AER cross correlations
between different stimuli are significantly lower than for similar
stimuli in an exposure level (3 msec) in which subjects fail to
make an above chance verbal discrimination. In view of the important
theoretical issues involved concerning the nature of subliminal
perception and unconscious cognitive processes this cross correlation
finding should be further investigated. Suggestions are made as
to how this might be done. (p. 395).
In our research we demonstrated that despite the
complete undetectability of the stimuli it is possible to find 1)
a discriminating physiological response and 20 a verbal effect related
to the perceptual content of meaning of the stimuli. Clearly, if
a subject cannot report seeing two stimuli presented some 30 times
each, but his brain can discriminate between them, that in itself
is evidence in favor of some subliminal process although we cannot
yet say that it is encoded as a perception. (p. 396).
Shevrin, H. Subliminal Perception and Dreaming.
The Journal of Mind and Behavior, 1986, 7 (2-3), 379 (249), 396
(266).
Research on the relationship between subliminal
perception and dreaming initiated interest in the field of subliminal
perception. Nevertheless, over the years only a very small number
of studies (11) have investigated this relationship. A review of
these studies is presented, divided into three sections: (a) early
studies of historical and theoretical interest, (b) quasi-clinical,
empirical studies, and (c) experimental studies. Essentially, the
early findings reported have been born out by subsequent empirical
and experimental studies: (1) Much that remains unreported and presumably
unconscious following briefly flashed stimulus is later recovered
in dreams, (2) dreams appear to be necessary to recover at least
some kinds of transformed or primary process aspects of the briefly
presented stimulus. Implications for our understanding of perception,
the nature of consciousness, and various states of consciousness
are discussed. (p. 379).
On the whole, it can be said that Poetzl's original
findings have been borne out and amplified: (1) a subliminal stimulus
registers and is recovered in dreams, and (2) recovery is subject
to certain transformations, verbal and visual, which appear similar
to Freud's distinction between primary and secondary processes.
(p. 379).
Finally, the small set of studies dealing with the
relationship of subliminal perception and dreaming underscore the
important role that unconscious psychological processes play in
our metal life. With recent advances in methods, as provide by subliminal
techniques, we are now capable of looking into the darkest corners
of the â€black box.' (p. 393).
Shevrin, H., and Dickman, S. The Psychological Unconscious:
A Necessary Assumption for All Psychological Theory? American Psychologist,
1980, 35 (5), 421-434.
The notion of complex psychological processes operating
outside of awareness has traditionally been associated with the
concept of the unconscious used by psychodynamically oriented clinicians;
it has never found an equivalent place in the mainstream of American
experimental psychology. However, mounting evidence from several
rather diverse fields of empirical research (eg., selective attention,
cortical evoked potentials, subliminal perception) provides support
for such a concept, and, in fact, explanatory constructs of a similar
nature have been embodied in several current models of perceptual
processing.
(p. 421).
At any given time, an individual is presented with
a broad array of stimuli of varying intensities and of varying relevance
to adaptive tasks. Selection on some basis must occur. Subliminal
stimuli are those stimuli that do not become conscious simply because
they are too weak in intensity, even though they may be highly relevant.
(p./ 426)
The basic question of whether people can respond
to a stimulus in the absence of the ability to report verbally on
its existence would today be answered in the affirmative by many
more investigators than would have been the case a decade ago…largely
because of better experimental methods and the convincing theoretical
argument that subliminal perception phenomena can be derived…from
the notion of selective attention and filtering. (p. 426).
Subliminal-perception research is concerned
with stimuli too weak to become conscious immediately, no matter
how much attention is directed to the stimulus field. No amount
of shifting attention, as in dichotic-listening experiments, can
bring the stimulus into consciousness. (p. 427).
Nevertheless, these stimuli have detectable
effects on conscious processes, but immediately and, in some cases,
after an interval of time. (p. 427).
…cortical responses can
be evoked by stimuli below the awareness threshold. He (Dixon) also
described an experiment by Shevrin and Rennick (1967) which indicated
that subliminal stimuli influence both cortical evoked potentials
and the subjects' free associations. And he discussed a study by
Begleiter, Gross, and Kissin (1969) which suggest that it may be
the meaning rather than the structure of the subliminal stimulus
that determines both the cortical response and subsequent behavior.
(p. 428).
In subliminal perception, then, the intensity
of the stimulus is great enough to elicit activity in the sensory
fibers but lacks sufficient energy to activate the nonspecific reticular
system. This information reaches the cortex without awareness of
the stimulus itself. (p. 428).
On the basis of findings from a series of evoked-potential
studies employing a pair of visual stimuli presented sub- and supraliminally,
Shevrin (1973) proposed that the evidence strongly suggests the
9a) complex unconscious psychological processes have identifiable
neurophysiological correlates, (b) these neurophysiological processes
are associated with attention to the meaning of the stimulus, (c)
different parameters of the evoked potential are associated with
different thought processes related to the subliminal stimulus…
(p. 429).
Shevrin, H., Smith, W.H. and Fitzler, D.E. Average
Evoked Response and Verbal Correlates of Unconscious Mental Processes.
Psychophysiology, 1971, 8 (2), 149-162.
A stimulus not consciously perceived can nevertheless
elicit an electrophysiological response (AER) and influence a verbal
response (free associations) which are, in turn, related to each
other in certain definable ways. Moreover, these findings are replicable
across Ss and across different methods for identifying AER components.
As such, the approach described in this study provides an objective
and manipulable way of investigating complex, unconscious s thought
processes. (p. 159).
Silverman, L. And Lachmann, F. The Therapeutic
Properties of Unconscious Oneness Fantasies: Evidence and Treatment
Implications. Contemporary Psychoanalysis, 1985, 21 91), 91-115.
Reviews (a) research evidence that supports the
thesis that unconscious oneness fantasies can enhance adaptation
and (b) the implications of this thesis for the conduct of psychoanalytic
treatment. A laboratory research method developed by the 1st author,
subliminal psychodynamic activation, is outlined, and limitations
of evidence from psychoanalytic treatment are explored. Studies
of oneness fantasies in schizophrenic and nonpsychotic populations
are described. Issues in the treatment of patients with developmental
arrests are discussed, along with method of differentiation. (p.
91).
Silverman, L. and Weinberger, J. Mommy and I are
one: Implications for Psychotherapy. American Psychologist, 1985,
40 (12), 1296-1308.
Presents evidence to support the thesis that there
are powerful unconscious wishes for a state of oneness with â€the
good mother of early childhood' and that gratification of these
wishes can enhance adaptation. Data come from experiments that used
the subliminal psychodynamic activation method with over 40 groups
of Ss from varied populations, including schizophrenics, neurotics,
and normal students. These studies have reported that the 4-msec
exposure of stimuli intended to activate unconscious symbiotic-like
fantasies (usually the words Mommy and I are one) produced ameliorative
effects on different dependent variables in a variety of settings.
It is proposed that patient-therapist relationship factors in psychotherapy,
seen by many as a common agent of change in different forms of treatment,
owe their effectiveness partly to their having activated these symbiotic-like
fantasies. Further studies are outlined that would provide a more
definitive test of this proposition. (p. 1296).
Silverman, L.H., Martin, A., Ungaro, R., and Mendelsohn,
E. Effect of Subliminal Stimulation of Symbiotic Fantasies on Behavior
Modification Treatment of Obesity. J. consult. Clin. Psychol., 1978,
46 (3), 432-41.
Silverman, Martin, Ungaro, and Mendelsohn (1978)
carried out two experiments on 30 and 26 women respectively. These
subjects, whose ages ranged from 22 to 59, who were at least 15%
overweight, and who regarded themselves as over-eaters and wished
to remedy this state of affairs, were, in each experiment, randomly
assigned to experimental and control groups for participation in
a behavior modification programme for over-eating. In the first
experiment the programme lasted 8 weeks and in the second for 12
weeks. The procedure for both groups involved weekly sessions along
the lines used by Wolersheim (1970) for the treatment of obesity
(ie. Instructions on how to keep records of amount and calorie content
of feed eaten, how to systematically reduce the number of situations
in which they ate and how to reward themselves for appropriate eating
behavior).
In addition, at the start and end of all
treatment sessions, each subject was asked to image a situation
in which she was tempted to over-eat and them presented tachistoscopically
with a 4 msec. Exposure of â€Mommy and I are one'
if they were in the experimental group or â€People
walking' if they were in the control group. Subjects were also instructed
that if they were tempted to over-eat outside of treatment sessions
they should form a mental image of the tachistoscopic flash and
try to refrain from eating.
The depending variable in this research was the
subject's weight measured during each session and again at 4 weeks
and 12 weeks after the programme ended.
In both studies the experimental groups lost more
weight than the control subjects, which differences increased to
reach significance by the end of the follow-up period. It was in
this continuation to lose weight (involving 84% of the experiment
subjects in the 2nd experiment) that the use of subliminal stimuli
seemed to assist most strikingly tradition methods (e.g. behavior
modifications) of helping people to reduce their over-eating. .
Silverman, L.H. Research on Psychoanalytic Psychodynamic
Propositions. Clinical Psychology Review, 1985, 5, 247-257.
Mention is made of a number of research programs
that have been in existence for the past 20 years that have systematically
explored psychoanalytic issues. One of these, that involves the
â€subliminal psychodynamic activation method, is
then detailed. At 4-millisecond exposures, verbal and/or pictorial
stimuli are presented to subjects, some of which contain content
related to unconscious wishes, fears and fantasies and others of
which are (relatively) neutral. A variety of psychoanalytically
based hypotheses have been tested on various clinical and non-clinical
populations. Two major findings have emerged: (a) A number of clinical
groups for example, schizophrenics, depressives and stutterers have
shown intensifications of their symptoms after the subliminal exposure
of stimuli designed to stir up particular unconscious conflicts;
and (b) various clinical and non-clinical groups have manifested
enhanced adaptive behavior after the subliminal exposure of the
message Mommy and I are one, conceived as activating unconscious
symbiotic fantasies. The implications of these findings are discussed.
(p. 247).
Singh, Y. and Devi, R.M. Subliminal Guessing: A
communication of Collegiate Students. Psycho Lingue, 1976, 6 (1-2),
23-28.
Investigated the effects of personality and sex
on subliminal guessing ability. Nineteen male and 31 female college
students were administered an Hindi version of the Maudsley Personality
Inventory to asses introversion-extroversion. Ten cards were presented
subliminally, and each subject was asked to guess the number of
objects depicted by each card. Introverts made significantly more
errors than the extraverts in guessing the number of items on one
of the cards presented (Card 4) and guess a significantly lower
number of items on another (Card 2). No other differences between
introverts and extraverts in errors or guessed number of objects
were significant, nor did males and females differ significantly
on any card either in errors or guessed number of objects. Evidence
of subliminal guessing ability is shown by the finding that the
number of objects guessed by the males and females approximated
the actual number of objects depicted on each card. (p. 23).
Smith, G., Carlsson, I. And Danielsson. A. Identification
with another person: Manipulated by means of subliminal stimulation.
Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 1985, 26, 74-87.
Studied problems of identification, using a meta-contrast
design. The firs stimulus (A) was always the word â€me.'
In experiment 1, the second stimulus (B) depicted an aggressor and
a victim facing each other. The subliminal A was flashed either
on the victim or the aggressor or completely withheld. In experiment
2, B showed two persons standing against different backgrounds:
an open horizon or a closed room. It was assumed that the subject
would be â€forced' to identify with that figure
in B on which A was flashed. Subjects in experiment 1 were 18 psychiatric
patients and in experiment 2, 32 professional artists. The results
showed that the subliminal manipulation had been effective: e.g.,
when led by A to identify with the aggressor, projective-sensitive
and borderline subjects were confused and even reported perceptual
difficulties; when led to identify with the open side, highly creative
artists, as opposed to less creative ones, reported more positive
impressions of the B theme. (p. 74).
Smith, G.J.W., Spence, D.Pl and Klein, G.S. Subliminal
Effects of Verbal Stimuli. J. Abnormal Soc. Psychology, 1958, 59,
167-176.
Employing a technique of exposing subliminal forms
followed immediately by supraliminal forms, two early experiments
have suggested that subliminal forms measurably affect conscious
perception. (p. 167).
The present study, like others which proceeded it
(Klein et al., 1958: Smith & Henriksson, 1955), has shown that
registration outside awareness can produce alteration in conscious
impression of an associate stimulus. The unique feature of the present
study was the use of words as subliminal stimuli which were more
obviously different in meaning that in contour. The words HAPPY
and ANGRY shown subliminally resulted in different impressions of
a consciously seen face. It seems clear, therefore, that meanings
were aroused by the subliminal words, and that these meanings directly
affected responses to the contiguous conscious stimulus. (p. 174).
Somekh, D.E. The Effect of Embedded Words in a Brief
Visual Display. Br. J. Psychol., 1976, 67 (4), 539-535.
In a replication and extension of an experiment
by Eagle, Wolitzky & Klein (1966), subjects wrote brief stories
describing an Object Relations Test card following exposure to a
7 X 7 letter matrix in which wee embedded either neutral words or
emotive words. (p. 529).
A crude content analysis yielded significantly more
unpleasant words in stories form the subgroups exposed to emotive
rather than neutral words, but again only under the very brief exposure
condition, the difference being absent in supraliminal control groups.
The relevance of these findings to previous experiments is discussed.
(p. 529).
The findings appear to confirm those of many previous
workers (see revises by Fisher, 1960 and Dixon, 1971) that marginal
or incidental stimuli, like subliminal stimuli, may be registered
without awareness and can be recovered in a variety of modes of
experience and behaviour in this case symbolically transferred as
imagery in a story. (p. 534).
Somekh, D.E. and Wilding, J.M. Perception Without
Awareness in a Dichoptic Viewing Situation. Br. J. Psychol., 1973,
64 (3), 339-349.
This experimental situation was used to replicate
an experiment of Smith et al. (1959) which claimed to demonstrate
that differences in meaning between words registered below recognition
threshold could affect associated conscious thoughts. In the two
experiments reported here, a neutral face was paired with affect
words presented subliminally and subjects were asked to rate its
expressing using a forces-choice indicator. Additional controls
to those of Smith et al. were used.
In Expt. 1 it was established that words presented
outside of awareness had an effect on semantically related judgments,
which was at least as great as that with the same words presented
supraliminally. In expt. II this was confirmed and it was found
that increasing the similarity of contour between critical and control
words of different meaning suggested differences between subliminal
and supraliminal sessions. Responses tended to be meaning-related
in the former and structure-related in the latter. It was suggested
that the experiments have relevance to current theories of selective
attention. (p. 339).
The results obtained are similar to those
of Smith et al. (1959), in that they suggest that words perceived
outside of awareness (i.e. when the subject is not aware of being
stimulated) or subliminally have an effect on the response to a
conscious percept processed simultaneously. (p. 347).
Spence, D.P. Subliminal Effects on Lexical Decision
Time. Archiv fur Psychologie, 1983, 135 (1), 67-72.
Studied the RTs of 9 right-handed Ss to 90 5-letter
target words under subliminal or near-liminal priming conditions.
Of the target words, one-third were meaningless and the rest of
varying frequency. Any target could be preceded by a blank, by a
related prime, or by an unrelated prime, or by an unrelated prime.
Targets were preceded by primes shown for 10, 20 and 40 msec. Results
show that the priming effect was demonstrated for related primes
but not in other conditions and that subliminal related primes facilitated
recognition, whereas near-liminal related primes did not. The later
effect may have been due to a form of forward masking. The subliminal
primes elicited a range of associates, thus increasing the probability
of facilitation. (p. 67).
Forty-seven heroin addicts being treated at the
New York VA Methadone Clinic were divided into an experimental and
a control group. In addition to the regular methadone treatment
program, both groups received subliminal exposures to a verbal messages
for 24 sessions (4 times a week for 6 weeks). (p. 751).
This study's findings, along with the results
from the three previous studies using subliminal symbiotic stimulation
as a treatment adjunct with addicted populations, suggest that symbiotic
wishes and dependency needs tend to be very active in addicts. Stimulating
symbiotic-like fantasies in addicts through the use of subliminal
messages can help to reduce the addict's need to seek fulfillment
of symbiotic wishes in maladaptive ways such as by abusing drugs.
(p. 763).
Walker, P. and Meyer, R.R. The Subliminal Perception
of Movement and the Course of Autokinesis. Br. J. Psychol., 1978,
69, 225-231.
The course of autokinesis is shown to be
sensitive to the real movement of a surrounding stimulus. With the
supraliminal presentation of this stimulus, apparent movement in
a direction opposite to that of the real movement is induced. With
the subliminal presentation of the same stimulus the real movement
serves to inhibit autokinesis by inducing brief periods of stationarity
between the phases of upward and downward apparent movement. The
results confirm previous findings that the movement of a stimulus
may be discriminated without there being any perceptual (phenomenal)
adjunct. (p. 225).
Westerlundh, B. Subliminal Influence on Imagery:
Two Exploratory Experiments. Psychological Research Bulle |