Automatic Minds: Cognitive Parallels Between Hypnotic States and Large Language Model Processing
Giuseppe Riva, Brenda K. Wiederhold, Fabrizia Mantovani

TL;DR
This paper explores deep functional parallels between hypnotic states and large language models, highlighting shared mechanisms like automaticity, suppressed monitoring, and contextual dependency, with implications for AI reliability and understanding cognition.
Contribution
It provides a novel comparative analysis of hypnotic and LLM processes, emphasizing their similarities in automatic pattern generation and the implications for AI design and cognitive science.
Findings
Both systems exhibit automatic, associative responses.
Errors such as confabulation and hallucination are linked to suppressed monitoring.
Hybrid AI architectures inspired by human cognition could improve reliability.
Abstract
The cognitive processes of the hypnotized mind and the computational operations of large language models (LLMs) share deep functional parallels. Both systems generate sophisticated, contextually appropriate behavior through automatic pattern-completion mechanisms operating with limited or unreliable executive oversight. This review examines this convergence across three principles: automaticity, in which responses emerge from associative rather than deliberative processes; suppressed monitoring, leading to errors such as confabulation in hypnosis and hallucination in LLMs; and heightened contextual dependency, where immediate cues (for example, the suggestion of a therapist or the prompt of the user) override stable knowledge. These mechanisms reveal an observer-relative meaning gap: both systems produce coherent but ungrounded outputs that require an external interpreter to supply…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPain Management and Placebo Effect · Mind wandering and attention · Action Observation and Synchronization
