This study aims to explore the correlative relationship between temporal variation and signal synchronization of spontaneous brain activity in self-hypnosis for respiratory motion control and relaxation. A resting-state fMRI was employed to an intra-subject of 15 hypnotist volunteers in rest state and self-hypnosis state to explore the inter-state difference of correlation within four conventional resting-state networks. The results demonstrated that coupled temporal variation and signal synchronization of brain activity in self-hypnosis. It provides neural implications of self-hypnosis, a psychological technology that can generate positively psychological and physiological effects, in controllable self-regulation, which is beneficial to cancer patients during radiotherapy.
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