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Dive into the research topics where Giulia Paoletti is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulia Paoletti.


International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | 2012

Hypnotizability Modulates the Cardiovascular Correlates of Subjective Relaxation

Enrica Laura Santarcangelo; Giulia Paoletti; Rita Balocchi; Giancarlo Carli; C. Morizzo; Carlo Palombo; Maurizio Varanini

Abstract Mean values and the spectral variability of heart rate (HRV), blood pressure, and skin blood flow were studied in high and low hypnotizable subjects during simple relaxation. Similar subjective relaxation was reported by highs and lows. A parasympathetic prevalence (indicated by a higher High-Frequency component of HRV and a lower High/Low-Frequency ratio) and lower renin-angiotensin activity (indicated by a lower Very-Low-Frequency component of HRV) could be attributed to highs with respect to lows. Hypnotizability did not affect blood pressure and its variability and modulated the skin blood flow across the session only in lows. The findings confirm that relaxation cannot be defined solely on cardiovascular parameters and also indicate that hypnotizability modulates cardiovascular activity during simple relaxation and suggest it may have a protective role against cardiovascular disease.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Cognitive modulation of psychophysical, respiratory and autonomic responses to cold pressor test.

Enrica Laura Santarcangelo; Giulia Paoletti; Iacopo Chiavacci; Carlo Palombo; Giancarlo Carli; Maurizio Varanini

In healthy subjects with high hypnotisability (highs) under hypnosis, subjectively effective suggestions for analgesia abolish the increases in blood pressure associated with cold pressor test (cpt) by reducing the peripheral vascular resistance. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effects of the suggestions of analgesia on the responses to cpt in healthy highs (n = 22) and in low hypnotisable participants (lows, n = 22) out of hypnosis. Cpt was administered without (CPT) and with suggestions for analgesia (CPT+AN). Psychophysical (pain intensity, pain threshold, cpt duration (time of immersion) and pain tolerance, defined as the difference between cpt duration and pain threshold), respiratory (amplitude and frequency) and autonomic variables (tonic skin conductance, mean RR interval (RR = 1/heart rate), blood pressure, skin blood flow) were studied. The suggestions for analgesia increased cpt duration and RR in both groups, but decreased pain intensity and enhanced pain threshold only in highs; in both groups they did not modulate systolic blood pressure, tonic skin conductance and skin blood flow; thus, increased parasympathetic activity appears responsible for the heart rate reduction induced by suggestions in both groups. In conclusion, our findings show that suggestions modulate pain experience differentially in highs and lows, and are partially effective also in lows. We hypothesize that the mechanisms responsible for the efficacy of suggestions in healthy lows may be involved also in their efficacy in chronic pain patients with low hypnotisability.


Experimental Brain Research | 2012

Postural effects of imagined leg pain as a function of hypnotizability

E. Scattina; Alexa Huber; Manuel Menzocchi; Giulia Paoletti; Giancarlo Carli; Diego Manzoni; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo

It has been shown that, in subjects with high hypnotizability (Highs), imagined somatosensory stimulation can involuntarily activate the neural circuits involved in the modulation of reflex action. In this vein, aim of the study was to investigate whether the imagery of nociceptive stimulation in one leg may produce both subjective experience of pain and congruent postural adjustments during normal upright stance. The displacement of the centre of pressure (CoP) was studied during imagery of leg pain (LP) and during the control conditions of imagery of tactile stimulation of the same leg and of throat pain (TP) in 12 Highs and 12 low hypnotizable subjects (Lows). The results showed that the vividness of imagery was higher in Highs than in Lows for all tasks and that only Highs reported actually feeling pain during LP and TP. Congruently, during LP only Highs displaced their CoP towards the leg opposite to the one that was the object of painful imagery and increased their CoP mean velocity and area of excursion. Since the Highs’ postural changes were not accounted for only by vividness of imagery and perceived pain intensity, high hypnotizability is apparently responsible for part of the postural effects of pain imagery.


Neuroscience Letters | 2013

Pain-inducing imagery as a function of hypnotisability and of the activity of Gray's Behavioral Inhibition/Activation Systems.

Enrica Laura Santarcangelo; Maurizio Varanini; Giulia Paoletti; Eleonora Castellani; Carlo Palombo; Giancarlo Carli

The aim of the study was to test the efficacy of pain imagery as a function of hypnotisability and of the activity of Behavioral Inhibition/Activation Systems. Questionnaires of imagery abilities (Betts) for the visual, cutaneous and organic modalities, absorption in cognitive tasks (TAS), proneness to inhibit stressful/painful experience/seek out positive experiences (BIS BAS), trait anxiety (STAI-Y2) and psychological well-being (PWB) were administered to 21 subjects with high hypnotisability (highs) and 21 subjects with low hypnotisability (lows). Self-reports of pain intensity and of neutral tactile perception were collected during imagery of nociceptive (Pain) and neutral tactile stimulation (NT). ECG and skin conductance were recorded. Highs exhibited greater imagery abilities, absorption, Behavioral Inhibition System Activity and psychological well-being with respect to lows. They reported lower scores of pain intensity than of tactile perception, while in lows Pain and NT scores did not differ. However, controlling for BAS, but not for BIS, revealed differences in the efficacy of pain imagery between highs and lows. Heart rate decreased in both tasks and groups; heart rate variability and skin conductance did not change significantly during imageries. Our findings suggest that the Behavioral Inhibition/Activation Systems interact with imagery abilities reducing the efficacy of pain imagery and prompt investigation of possible similar interactions in the modulation of physically induced experimental pain and of chronic pain in the general population.


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2012

Watching neutral and threatening movies: subjective experience and autonomic responses in subjects with different hypnotizability levels.

Enrica Laura Santarcangelo; Giulia Paoletti; Rita Balocchi; E. Scattina; Brunello Ghelarducci; Maurizio Varanini

Subjects with high hypnotizability scores (Highs) have been considered more prone to experience negative affect and more vulnerable to its autonomic effects with respect to low hypnotizable individuals (Lows). The aim of the study was to analyze the subjective experience, tonic skin conductance (SC), respiratory frequency (RF), heart rate (HR) and heart rate variability (HRV) of healthy Highs and Lows during a long-lasting, emotionally neutral task (Session R, 46 subjects) and a moderately threatening one (Session T, 35 subjects). At the end of the relaxing Session R, all participants reported an increased relaxation. At the end of the threatening Session T, only 20 subjects reported a decreased relaxation (effective T: eT subsample). Highs and Lows of this subsample reported a similarly reduced relaxation and showed a similarly increased skin conductance. HR and HRV did not differ between the two sessions and between Highs and Lows. Among the subjects not reporting decreased relaxation at the end of Session T (ineffective T: iT subsample, n=15), relaxation was deeper and associated with lower skin conductance in Highs, although HR and HRV did not differ between Highs and Lows. All together, the results do not support the hypothesis of higher proneness of Highs to experience negative affect and to exhibit the autonomic correlates of negative emotion.


International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | 2015

Paradoxical response to an emotional task: trait characteristics and heart-rate dynamics

Rita Balocchi; Maurizio Varanini; Giulia Paoletti; Giulio Mecacci; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo

Abstract The present study evaluated the heart-rate dynamics of subjects reporting decreased (responders) or paradoxically increased relaxation (nonresponders) at the end of a threatening movie. Heart-rate dynamics were characterized by indices extracted through recurrence quantification analysis (RQA) and detrended fluctuation analysis (DFA). These indices were studied as a function of a few individual characteristics: hypnotizability, gender, absorption, anxiety, and the activity of the behavioral inhibition and activation systems (BIS/BAS). Results showed that (a) the subjective experience of responsiveness is associated with the activity of the behavioral inhibition system and (b) a few RQA and DFA indices are able to capture the influence of cognitive-emotional traits, including hypnotizability, on the responsiveness to the threatening task.


International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis | 2018

HYPNOTIZABILITY AND PAIN MODULATION: A Body–Mind Perspective

Maurizio Varanini; Rita Balocchi; Giancarlo Carli; Giulia Paoletti; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo

Abstract The study investigated whether the cardiac activity and cognitive–emotional traits sustained by the behavioral inhibition/activation system (BIS/BAS) may contribute to hypnotizability-related pain modulation. Nociceptive stimulation (cold-pressor test) was administered to healthy participants with high (highs) and low (lows) hypnotizability in the presence and absence of suggestions for analgesia. Results showed that heart rate increased abruptly at the beginning of nociceptive stimulation in all participants. Then, only in highs heart rate decreased for the entire duration of hand immersion. During stimulation with suggestions of analgesia, pain threshold negatively correlated with heart rate. BIS/BAS activity partially accounted for the observed hypnotizability-related differences in the relation between cardiac interoception and pain experience.


Soc Ital Physiol | 2009

Cardiac control in subjects with different hypnotic susceptibility during simple relaxation, low attentional and moderately threatening cognitive tasks.

Giulia Paoletti; Maurizio Varanini; E. Scattina; Rita Balocchi; Brunello Ghelarducci; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo


CONTEMPORARY HYPNOSIS & INTEGRATIVE THERAPY JOURNAL | 2014

Heart rate dynamics in subjects with different hypnotisability

Giulia Paoletti; Alexa Huber; Rita Balocchi; Maurizio Varanini; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo


International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2012

Possible role of the Gray's behavioral inhibition system in the greater efficacy of pleasant than unpleasant imagery in subjects with high hypnotizability

Enrica Laura Santarcangelo; Maurizio Varanini; Giulia Paoletti; Eleonora Castellani; Carlo Palombo; Giancarlo Carli

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Rita Balocchi

National Research Council

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