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{{dablink|This article is about NLP, the interpersonal communications and psychotherapy model. It should not be confused with the interdisciplinary study of [[neurolinguistics]], which is covered in a separate article. There is also a [[NLP|disambiguation page]] for other uses of the acronym.}}
'''Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP)''' is a collection of pseudoscientific self-help rituals proposed for programming the mind {{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}{{ref|Raso1994}}.
 
   
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'''Neuro-linguistic programming''' ('''NLP''') is an [[NLP and science|unvalidated]] approach to [[psychotherapy]] and a "model of [[interpersonal]] communications"<ref name="Oxford">"neurolinguistic programming n." A Dictionary of Psychology. Andrew M. Colman. Oxford University Press, 2006. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. 6 September 2007 <http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?subview=Main&entry=t87.e5474></ref> based on the subjective study of language, communication and change. It was co-founded by [[Richard Bandler]] and linguist [[John Grinder]] in the 1970s as a method of [[personal development]]. They developed a set of practices and techniques based on [[modeling (NLP)|modeling]] successful psychotherapists of the time. However, its application was not limited to psychotherapy, rather they attended to the patterns of [[interpersonal]] communications that could be applied generally. Its theoretical foundations borrowed from a range of disciplines, including various psychological fields, [[linguistics]], [[cognitive science]] and [[occupational therapy]]. NLP and its many variants are taught through seminars, workshops, books and audio programs. The field is loosely spread and resistant to a single comprehensive definition. There is also a great deal of difference between the depth and breadth of training and standards.
NLP was proposed in [[1973]] by [[Richard Bandler]] and [[John Grinder]] as a set of models and principles to describe the relationship between [[mind]] (''neuro'') and [[language]] (''linguistic'', both verbal and non-verbal) and how their interaction might be organized (''programming'') to affect an individual's mind, body and behavior. It is described by the original developers as "therapeutic magic" and "the study of the structure of subjective experience" {{ref|Sharpley1987}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}. It is predicated upon the assumption that all [[behavior]]s have a practically determinable structure {{ref|id_magic1}} [http://www.purenlp.com/whatsnlp.htm].
 
   
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An important assumption of NLP is that [[emotion]], [[thought]] and [[behavior]] consists of, and is influenced by, how the sensory-specific modalities ([[mental image|visual]], [[auditory imagery|auditory]], [[kinesthetic]], [[olfactory]], [[gustatory]]) are organized and give rise to consciousness.<ref name="Bander and Grinder 1975a"> Bandler, Richard & John Grinder (1975a). The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy]. Palo Alto, CA: Science & Behavior Books., ch.3</ref> Further, the mode and limits to the underlying [[mental model|mental representation]]s is revealed by unconscious choice of words, sensory-specific predicates (eg. [[visual language]]) and non-verbal cues (such as [[intonation (linguistics)|intonation]]; [[gesture]]; [[posture]]; [[facial expression]] and [[eye movements]]). A basic method in NLP involves asking specifying questions to help clarify the intended message in communication. It seeks to recover what has been left out and to [[reframing (NLP)|reframe]] faulty thinking when the communication is distorted or over-generalised. These [[meta-model (NLP)|meta-model]] questions are often combined with [[milton model|suggestions]] for personal growth and potential.<ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1976"/> Another technique seeks to alter sensory-specific [[submodalities]] (eg. brightness, size or location of visual imagery or sensory representations) to affect the intensity of mental states and affect changes in behavior. A classic format has people [[Anchoring (NLP)|anchor]] resourceful mind-body states (eg. [[creativity]], [[confidence]], etc.) to make them available in situations where a person wants to act differently. Generally, the intent of NLP is to increase choice in the underlying representations so that the individual has more choice and flexibility in the world.
NLP is based on [[New Age]] principles {{ref|Raso1994b}} such as the belief in unlimited potential through access to subconscious engrams [http://www.conts.com/learn.html], and body language cues derived from the observation of “therapeutic wizards” {{ref|frogs}}. Some techniques include behavior change, transforming [[belief]]s, and treatment of [[trauma]]s through techniques such as [[reframing (NLP)|reframing]] {{ref|reframing}}{{ref|frogs}} and the "[[metamodel|meta-modeling]]" {{ref|id_magic1}} proposed for exploring the personal limits of belief as expressed in language.
 
   
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In the early 1980s, NLP was heralded as an important advance in psychotherapy and counseling.<ref name="Devilly 2005">Devilly GJ (2005) Power therapies and possible threats to the science of psychology and psychiatry Austral NZ J Psych 39:437-445(9)</ref> Reviews of research in [[counseling psychology]] at this time found little [[empirical research|empirical support]] for NLP assumptions or effectiveness in the literature, in particular the claim that matching sensory predicates improves rapport and influence.<ref name="Sharpley 1987"/><ref name="druckman2004">Druckman, Daniel (2004) "[http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bell/jasp/2004/00000034/00000011/art00002 Be All That You Can Be: Enhancing Human Performance]" ''Journal of Applied Social Psychology'', Volume 34, Number 11, November 2004, pp. 2234-2260(27)</ref> The lack of support in the literature reviews marked a significant decrease in research interest.<ref name="Gelso and Fassinger 1990">''Gelso and Fassinger (1990) "Counseling Psychology: Theory and Research on Interventions" ''Annual Review of Psychology''</ref> There has been some ongoing research efforts and pleas for further empirical research.{{Fact|date=August 2007}} The developers of NLP tend to use [[analogies]] to understand and describe their models and tend to rely on [[Intuition (knowledge)|intuition]], [[anecdotal evidence|anecdotes]] and [[personal experience]] as evidence as opposed to [[experimental research]]. NLP and its related techniques continue to be popular in books and workshops, especially in some areas of [[Neuro-linguistic psychotherapy|psychotherapy]], management training, self-help, education and motivational training. NLP is criticized by some evidence based psychologists as a form of [[New Age]] psychotherapy that has little, if any, empirical support.<ref name="Lilienfeld 2003"/><ref name="Drenth 1999"/><ref name="Devilly 2005"/>
The practice initially attracted mostly therapists, although it eventually attracted business and sales people, and [[New Age]] believers {{ref|Meta-States}}. NLP has been applied to a number of fields such as sales, psychotherapy, communication, education, coaching, sport, business management, interpersonal relationships, seduction, occult and spirituality.
 
   
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==Concepts and methods==
NLP has been criticized in scientific research reviews which conclude that it is scientifically unsupported and largely ineffective {{ref|Singer1999}}{{ref|Heap_1988}}{{ref|Sharpley1987}}{{ref|Lilienfeld_2003b}}. Several reviews have concluded that NLP is merely pseudoscientific mass-marketed [[psychobabble]]{{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}{{ref|Helisch}}{{ref|Williams_2000}}{{ref|eisner2000}}{{ref|Drenth_2003}}. NLP is identified as a dubious therapy {{ref|Heap_1991}}{{ref|Dylan}}{{ref|dryden}} and described by experts such as Winkin{{ref|Winkin1991}}, and the US-based NGO [[National Council Against Health Fraud]] as charlatanry and fraudulent [http://www.yorku.ca/danaa/vol1-1/Parker.htm]{{ref|NCAHF}}{{ref|Heap_1991}} and is promoted in the same mold as Dianetics and Scientology{{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}{{ref|Williams_2000}}{{ref|singer_1999}}.
 
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{{main|Methods of neuro-linguistic programming}}
   
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===Map/territory distinction===
==Overview==
 
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An important idea in NLP is that a person's point of view perception of their own world is already filtered by biology and beliefs. First there are limitations to what freqencies and wavelengths can be detected at the sensory receptors and, second, there are neurological processes that distort, generalise and delete information before it can ever be perceived in consciousness. So, people tend to think and act based on their best available maps of the world. Even a person with a problem behavior is responding based on the best information they had at the time.<ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1975a" />
NLP participants are taught that the human mind can be programmed, and that mis-programming by negative input is the norm. Like Scientology, rebirthing and other alternative therapies (Raso 1994)(Lilienfeld 2003) NLP embraces this Null Hypothesis and the classic New Age concept of "clearing" these blocks (Singer 1996). While the more traditional therapies concentrate on solving problems by focusing on the reasons 'why' (Singer 1996), Neurolinguistic programming looks at the 'hows' to provide a quick fix to a solution {{ref|edwards_1996}}{{ref|sharpley_1987}}{{ref|sala1999}}{{ref|Singer_1999}}.
 
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Bandler and Grinder credit [[Alfred Korzybski]] and his book, ''Science and Sanity''<ref>Alfred Korzybski [http://www.esgs.org/uk/art/sands.htm Science & Sanity]</ref>, for starting them on the philosophical path for founding NLP, specifically Korzybski's idiom, [[the map is not the territory]] that says people should distinguish between the actual world and abstractions of it. In addition, Korzybski's critique of cause-effect thinking influenced an important aspect of the NLP meta model.<ref name="Bandler and Grinder 1975a"/> The aim of much of NLP is to explore the limits of an individuals's map of the world and to offer challenges to expand it.<ref name="Bandler and Grinder 1975a"/><ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1979" /><ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1983">{{cite book | author=Bandler, Richard & John Grinder | title=Reframing: Neurolinguistic programming and the transformation of meaning | location=Moab, UT | publisher=Real People Press. | year=1983 | pages=appendix II,p.171}}</ref><ref name="Bandler and Grinder 1975a" />
   
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===Modeling exceptional people===
NLP is widely promoted through the [[popular psychology]], [[self development]], and [[New Age]] sections of bookshops, and advertised in various media including the [[Internet]] and [[infomercial]]s.
 
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{{main|Modeling (NLP)}}
   
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The co-founders of NLP, Bandler and Grinder, started by observing and replicating three successful [[psychotherapist]]s, [[Milton Erickson]] ([[hypnotherapy]]), [[Virginia Satir]] ([[family therapy]]), and [[Fritz Perls]] ([[gestalt therapy]]). They were interested in what were the key strategies that made these therapists more successful in their particular area of study. The communications, strategies and language patterns these therapists used became the base for NLP. They wanted to be able to replicate the behaviour of the therapists first before explicating the models, saying '[we] build a model of what they do...we know that our modeling has been successful when we can systematically get the same behavioral outcome as the person we have modeled'.<ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1979">{{cite book | author=Bandler, R., Grinder, J. | title=Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming | location=Moab, UT | publisher=Real People Press. | year=1979 | | pages=149(pp.15,24,30,45,52) | id=ISBN 0911226192}}</ref> The 'model' is then reduced to a pattern that can be taught to others. NLP modeling methods are designed to unconsciously assimilate the tacit knowledge of what the master is doing, and of which the master is not aware, and can involve modeling "exceptional" people.<ref name="Jacobson 1994">Jacobson, S. (1994) Info-line: practical guidelines for training and development professionals, ''American Society For Training and Development'' Alexandria, VA [http://sidjacobson.com/institute/history.html Adapted version available online ]</ref> Describing the NLP modeling process, Einspruch & Forman (1985) stated that "when modeling another person the modeler suspends his or her own beliefs and adopts the structure of the physiology, language, strategies, and beliefs of the person being modeled. After the modeler is capable of behaviorally reproducing the patterns (of behavior, communication, and behavioral outcomes) of the one being modeled, a process occurs in which the modeler modifies and readopts his or her own belief system while also integrating the beliefs of the one who was modeled."<ref name="Einspruch & Forman 1985">{{cite journal | author=Einspruch, Eric L., Forman, Bruce D. | title=Observations Concerning Research Literature on Neuro-Linguistic Programming | journal=Journal of Counseling Psychology | year=1985 | volume=32(4) | pages=pp. 589-596}}</ref> Modeling is not confined to therapy, but is applied to a broad range of human learning. Another aspect of modeling is understanding the patterns of one's own behaviors in order to 'model' the more successful parts of oneself.
===Foundational Assumptions===
 
Distinct from its formal presuppositions, NLP incorporates a variety of foundational assumptions that precede the presuppositions. These are:
 
   
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===Meta model===
#There is a [[mind-body problem|mind-body]] (and some also include [[spirituality]]) connection {{ref|turtles|pp.xx,xxi}} {{ref|whispering|ch.3 ''ibid'' p.222}}.
 
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{{main|Meta model (NLP)}}
#The mind is broadly composed of a conscious and a subconscious (or unconscious) component {{ref|id_magic2a}}.
 
#A person's experience of the world is processed and organized exclusively in terms of the five senses {{ref|id_magic2}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980pg17}}
 
#Physiology, sensory representation ("submodality") and emotion comprise internal ''state'' {{ref|Dilts_2000pg1303}}.
 
#Behavior is the result of systematically ordered sequences of sensory representations ("strategies") {{ref|frogspg30}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980pg6}}.
 
#All behavior occurs in the context of internal state {{ref|Dilts_2000pg1300}}.
 
#Internal state mediates experience and influences or determines behavior {{ref|Dilts_2000pg1300}}.
 
#Internal state and strategy -- hence behavior -- have a discernible and communicable structure {{ref|Dilts_et_al1980pg}} {{ref|Dilts_2000pg1303}}.
 
#People exhibit their internal state in their language (verbal and non-verbal) {{ref|Dilts_2000pg75}}.
 
#Since behavior and its substrates -- internal state and strategy -- can be codified, a person's skill can be reproduced in another person {{ref|Dilts_et_al1980pg14}}.
 
#Behavior is learned {{ref|Dilts_et_al1980pg4}}.
 
#Direct and objective knowledge of the (external) world is not possible {{ref|id_magic1}}{{ref|id_magic2}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980pg3}}.
 
   
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Meta-modeling in NLP is the process of carefully questioning the distortions that occur in natural language with the intent of helping someone develop new choice in thinking and behavior. For example, if someone says, "Everyone must love me" the message is overly general as it does not specify any particular person or group of people. That is, the sentence is semantically ill-formed. It therefore raises the question, "Which people, specifically?". Other meta model questions seek to recover unspoken information or challenge distorted information that might be underlying restrictive thinking and beliefs.<ref name="Bandler and Grinder 1975a"/>
===NLP and Theory===
 
Many NLP proponents state that NLP is not theory-oriented, and Bandler states that he does not "do theory" {{ref|Singer1996}}. Instead, the stated goals of NLP are to model effective patterns "in the field", to learn what someone is actually doing in practice (internally and externally) that works, and how they do it, rather than deriving behaviors from a theory or obtaining their motivations for doing them. However, NLP proponents do make hypotheses and propose armchair theories {{ref|Singer1996}}. For example, NLP assumes that all human behaviour is neurological, and all human behaviour is based on the 5 senses, rather than attitudes, reason, emotions, mind, morals or ego {{ref|Singer1996}}.
 
   
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It was developed by Bandler and Grinder (1973-1975) based on their imitation of [[Fritz Perls]] and [[Virginia Satir]] together with Grinder's work with [[transformational grammar]].<ref name="Bandler and Grinder 1975a"/> By listening to and responding to the distortions (generalizations and deletions) in a client's sentences, the practitioner seeks to respond the form of the sentence rather than his or her preconceptions. In contrast, a therapist who 'listens' on the basis of their existing belief systems may miss important aspects.
===Common techniques and practices===
 
* '''Meta model:''' questions to recover distortion, generalisation and deletion from a speaker {{ref|id_magic1}}[http://www.iscn.at/select_newspaper/requirements/sophist.html]).
 
* '''Representational systems:''' verbal and non-verbal cues such as eye movements, sensory predicates, breathing rate, and body posture are calibrated to identify the modality, type and sequence of internal Visual, Auditory or Kinesthetic representations {{ref|frogspg24}}{{ref|patterns1|p.9}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}.
 
* '''Perceptual positions:''' a situation is considered from different [[Perspective (cognitive)|points of view]] of those involved, typically self, other, and neutral observer {{ref|turtles|pp.xix,197}} {{ref|Dilts_2000pg938}}.
 
* '''Dilts' Neurological Levels of Learning:''' categorisation of information into a hierarchies consisting of environment, behavior, competency, belief/value, identity and purpose (or spirit) {{ref|Dilts_2000}}.
 
* '''Swish:''' a basic "quick-fix" technique that involves swapping a representation of a simple habit for desired self-image in the future {{ref|id_brain}}{{ref|whispering|p.169}}.
 
* '''Visual / Kinesthetic dissociation:''' separates the see-feel [[synaesthesia]] that drives reponses to a stimulus. The NLP "phobia cure" uses two place dissociation {{ref|frogs}}{{ref|Einspruch}}{{ref|Carbonell_Figley1999}}[http://www.cancer.org/docroot/ETO/content/ETO_5_3X_Neuro-Linguistic_Programming.asp?sitearea=ETO]
 
* '''[[Rapport]]:''' pacing and leading attention by matching, mirroring or cross pacing verbal and non-verbal behavior {{ref|patterns2}}{{ref|Clabby_2004}} such as breathing, sensory predicates {{ref|frogspg15}}, and gestures.
 
* '''Submodality modification:''' deliberately altering the coding of internal sensory representations such as location, size and brightness of internal images{{ref|id_brain}} (S & C Andreas [http://www.achievingexcellence.com/p-ch_and4.html 1987])
 
   
=== NLP Modeling ===
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===Milton model===
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{{main|Milton model}}
[[Modeling (NLP)|NLP modeling]] is a method that is promoted for duplicating behaviour, expertise or excellence, or reproducing "magic" abilites of experts {{ref|magic1}}. It is considered by some practitioners to be at the heart of NLP {{ref|John_Interview}}. It can be thought of as the process of discovering relevant distinctions within these experiential components, as well as sequencing these components, aiming to achieve a specific result. NLP proponents claim that it is used to discover and codify patterns of excellence as demonstrated consistently by top performers in any field {{ref|whispering}}. It has also been applied to clinical conditions, such as the "skill" of [[schizophrenia]] {{ref|frogspg52}}{{ref|reframing|p.171}}{{ref|turtles|p.62}} and notable dead people of whom we have only writings, such as [[Jesus of Nazareth]] {{ref|cognitive_pattern}}. It has been argued that modeling from writings is unverifiable (both within and outside NLP).
 
   
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The Milton model is a way of communicating based on the hypnotic language patterns of [[Milton Erickson]].<ref name="Barretta 2004">Norma Barretta (2004) Review of Hypnotic Language: Its Structure and Use. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis. Bloomingdale: Jan 2004. Vol.46, Iss. 3; pg. 261, 2 pgs</ref> It has been described as "a way of using language to induce and maintain trance in order to contact the hidden resources of our personality".<ref name="OConnor & Seymour 2002">{{cite book | author=Joseph O'Connor, John Seymour | title=Introducing NLP | location=London | publisher=HarperCollins | year=2002 (first published 1990) | url=http://www.reiters.com/index.cgi?ISBN=1855383446&f=p | id=1855383446}}</ref> The Milton model has three primary aspects: First, to assist in building and maintaining [[rapport (NLP)|rapport]] with the client. Second, to overload and distract the conscious mind so that [[unconscious communication]] can be cultivated. Third, to allow for interpretation in the words offered to the client.<ref name="Pruett 2002">Pruett, Julie Annette Sikes (2002) The application of the neuro-linguistic programming model to vocal performance training D.M.A., The University of Texas at Austin, 151 pages; AAT 3108499 </ref> Furthermore, communicating with metaphor was an essential part of Milton's methods providing a platform whereby Erickson could smoothly deliver his therapeutic suggestions.
==Fundamentals==
 
===Presuppositions===
 
The [[presuppositions]] of NLP are sometimes described as an [[epistemology]] {{ref|id_magic1}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}{{ref|turtles}}{{ref|whispering}}{{ref|Malloy}}. A [[presupposition]] (linguistic term) is a background belief that is treated by the NLP practitioner "as if"{{ref|Vaihinger_1924}}{{ref|id_magic1}} it were literally true.
 
   
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===Representational systems===
The fundamental presuppositions in NLP are:
 
*'''The map is not the territory. ''' "NLP epistemology" follows [[Alfred Korzybski]] (1933) and [[Gregory Bateson]]'s (1972, 1979) postulations that there is no such thing as "[[objectivity | objective experience]]". The [[subject (philosophy)|subjective]] nature of our experience never fully captures the objective world. It is assumed that each of us creates a representation of the world in which we live - that is, we create a map or model which we use to generate our behavior. Our representation or map of the world determines to a large degree what our experience of the world will be {{ref|id_magic1}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}.
 
*'''Life and 'Mind' are Systemic Processes'''. The processes that take place within a human being and between human beings and their environment are systemic {{ref|ecology}}. Our bodies, our societies, and our planet form an [[ecology]] of complex systems and sub-systems all of which interact with and mutually influence each other. This assumes that looking from different vantage points may result in quite different and yet equally valid descriptions and emphasis of what is important in the system {{ref|turtles}}{{ref|Dilts_2000}}.
 
   
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[[Representational systems (NLP)|Sensory representational systems]] is a model in NLP concerned with how the different sensory modalities are organised to form the conscious representations of experience. For example, pictorial representation must be modality specific to the visual sensory mode. Similarly ideas featuring sound and touch involve the sensory modality which was involved in its perception. When people are thinking, they form images, sounds together with internal feelings. In NLP, this notion is extended to the performance of any task, such as making conversation, talking about a problem, reading a book, kicking a ball or riding a horse, representations consisting of [[Mental imagery|images]], [[Auditory imagery|sounds]], [[kinesthetic|feelings]] (and possibly [[olfactory|smell]] and [[gustatory|taste]]) are constantly being formed and activated.<ref name="Druckman & Swets 1998">Druckman and Swets (eds) (l988) [http://darwin.nap.edu/books/0309037921/html/133.html Enhancing Human Performance: Issues, Theories, and Techniques], National Academy Press.</ref> It is claimed that the organisation of these representations have a unavoidable impact on performance. It is also claimed that knowledge of the underlying representations, as revealed through the use of spoken predicates, can assist someone in gaining rapport and influence in conversation. In the psychotherapeutic setting, the spoken predicates might be used to gain rapport to influence change. For example, the spoken prediates, "see" and "bright" in "I can ''see'' a ''bright'' future for myself", such [[visual language]] must be modality specific to the visual sensory mode. In "I can feel that we will be comfortable" would involve [[kinesthetic]] modality because of the predicates "feel" and "comfortable". In this setting, changes could be thought of as interrupting and replacing representations with more positive and creative alternatives.<ref name="Cooper and Seal 2006">Cooper and Seal (2006) "Theory and Approaches - Eclectic-integrative approaches: Neuro-linguistic programming" In Feldtham and Horton (Eds) The SAGE Handbook of Counselling and Psychotherapy 2e </ref> Some of these ideas of this [[visual language]] and alike appear to have been imported from [[gestalt therapy]] shortly after its creation.<ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1979">{{cite book | author=Bandler, R., Grinder, J. | title=Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming | location=Moab, UT | publisher=Real People Press. | year=1979 | | pages=149(pp.15,24,30,45,52) | id=ISBN 0911226192}}</ref>
These presuppositions are considered groundbreaking by NLP proponents because of a contradiction with the modern scientific [[Aristotelian philosophy | Aristotelian]] view that reality can be objectively measured {{ref|frogs}}{{ref|turtles}}{{ref|Singer1999}}, and the psychoanalyst view is that the presuppositions upon which NLP are founded are not valid (Strean 1995),
 
   
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====Submodalities====
The other commonly related presuppositions are derived from the these two fundamental presuppositions {{ref|Dilts_2000pg1003}}.
 
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{{main|Submodalities (NLP)}}
   
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A submodality in NLP is a distinction of form or structure (rather than content) within a sensory [[representational systems (NLP)|representational system]]. For example, regardless of the content, both external and [[mental images]] of any kind will be either colored or monochrome, and stationary or moving. These parameters are submodalities within the [[visual system|visual modality]]. Similarly, both remembered and actual sounds will be mono or stereo when experienced internally, so mono/stereo is a submodality of sound. In the late 1970s, the developers of NLP extended the use [[mental imagery|visual imagery]] (common in sports psychology and meditation), to submodalities in other sensory modalities. Examples include the relative size, location, brightness of [[mental imagery|internal images]], the volume and direction of internal voices and sounds, and the location, texture, and movement of internally created [[kinesthetic|sensations]].<ref name="Tosey & Mathison 2003">Tosey, P. Jane Mathison (2003) Neuro-linguistic Programming and learning theory: a response ''The Curriculum Journal'' Vol.14 No.3 p.371-388 See also (available online): [http://www.leeds.ac.uk/educol/documents/00003319.htm Neuro-linguistic programming: its potential for learning and teaching in formal education]</ref> A typical submodality intervention involves increasing or decreasing the submodalities of internal representations. This, combined with hypnosis is a feature of [[Richard Bandler]]'s later work.<ref name="Bandler 1984">eg. Bandler, R. (1984) Using your brain for a change</ref> For example, to increase or decrease the intensity of a certain state, the brightness, colour, or location of the associated internal images are altered. Although NLP did not discover submodalities, it appears that the proponents of NLP may have been the first to systematically use manipulation of submodalities for therapeutic or personal development purposes, particularly [[phobia]]s, [[compulsion]]s and [[addictions]].<ref name="Dilts & Delozier 2000">{{cite book | last = Dilts | first = Robert B | coauthors = DeLozier, Judith A | title = Encyclopedia of Systemic Neuro-Linguistic Programming and NLP New Coding | publisher = NLP University Press |date= 2000 | url = http://www.nlpuniversitypress.com/ | id = ISBN 0970154003}}</ref>
===The B.A.G.E.L. Model===
 
The B.A.G.E.L. Model specifies the five elements (in mnemonic form) that purportedly comprise the behavioral cues that indicate an individual's internal processes. The B.A.G.E.L. Model is predicated on the notion that internal processes are subjectively represented in sensory terms: visually, auditory, kinesthetically and least likely, olfactory and gustatory.
 
<div class="boilerplate metadata" id="attention" style="background-color: #FFFCE6; margin: 0 2.5%; padding: 0 10px; border: 1px solid #aaa;">
 
#'''B'''ody posture (eg. leaning back, head upwards and shallow breathing indicates visual representation)
 
#'''A'''ccessing cues (eg. fluctuating voice tone and tempo indicates auditory representation)
 
#'''G'''estures (eg. gesturing below the neck indicates kinesthetic representation)
 
#'''E'''ye movements (See '''Eye accessing cues and the representational systems''' below)
 
#'''L'''anguage patterns (specifically sensory based, eg. "I see!", "Sounds right!" or "I feel that..."){{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}{{ref|Dilts_2000}}{{ref|modeling_with_nlp}}
 
</div>
 
   
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===Principles===
===Eye accessing cues, body cues, and NLP representational systems===
 
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{{main|Principles of NLP}}
[[image:NLP_neural_elicitation2.JPG|250px|thumbnail|right|Eye accessing cues of NLP (for a normally organized right-hander)'']]
 
   
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*'''''The map is not the territory'''''<ref> (derived from [[Alfred Korzybski]] in "[[General Semantics]]" See also [[Gregory Bateson]].).</ref>
A core NLP training exercise involves learning to calibrate eye movements patterns with internal representations {{ref|frogspg24}}{{ref|Dilts_2000pg383}}; {{ref|whisperin|p.171}}. According to NLP developers, this core tennet loosely relates to the VAK guidelines below. ''See chart {{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}{{ref|OConnor}}''{{ref|Dilts_2000pg383}}:
 
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*'''''Life and mind are systemic processes'''''<ref name="Cooper 2006">Cooper, J. & Seal, P. "5.26 Neuro-linguistic programming (p.330)" in Feltham & Horton (eds.) ''The SAGE Handbook of Counselling And Psychotherapy'' Sage Publications.</ref>
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*'''''Behind every behavior there is a positive intention.''''' Even a seemingly negative thought or behavior has a positive function at some level or in some other context.<ref> (eg. Six step reframing)</ref>
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*'''''There is no failure, only feedback.'''''
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*'''''The meaning of the communication is the response it produces, not the intended communication.'''''
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* '''''One cannot not communicate''''': Every behaviour is a kind of communication. Because behaviour does not have a counterpart (there is no anti-behaviour), it is not possible not to communicate. <ref>Derived form the work of Gregory Bateson, much of which is collected in Steps to an Ecology of Mind (1972). See also [[Paul Watzlawick]]</ref>
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*'''''Choice is better than no choice.''''' An idea from cybernetics that holds the most flexible element in a system will have the most influence or choice in that system.<ref name="Cooper 2006"/>
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*'''''People already have all the internal resources they need to succeed.'''''
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*'''''Multiple descriptions are better than one'''''<ref name="Bateson 1977">See also: [[Steps to an Ecology of Mind]]).</ref>
   
  +
===Techniques===
*'''Visual:''' eyes up to left or right according to dominant hemisphere access; high or shallow breathing; muscle tension in neck; high pitched/nasal voice tone; phrases such as “I can ''imagine'' the big ''picture''”.
 
  +
====Anchoring====
*'''Auditory:''' eyes left or right; even breathing from diaphragm; even or rhythmic muscle tension; clear midrange voice tone, sometimes tapping or whistling; phrases such as “Let's ''tone'' down the ''discussion''”.
 
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{{Main|Anchoring (NLP)}}
*'''Kinesthetic:''' eyes down left or right; belly breathing and sighing; relaxed musculature; slow voice tone with long pauses; phrases such as “I can ''grasp'' a ''hold'' of it”
 
  +
Anchoring is a NLP term for the process by which memory recall, state change or other responses become associated with ([[Anchoring (NLP)|anchored]] to) some stimulus, in such a way that perception of the stimulus (the anchor) leads by reflex to the anchored response occurring. The stimulus may be quite neutral or even out of conscious awareness, and the response may be either positive or negative. Anchors are capable of being formed and reinforced by repeated stimuli, and thus are analogous to [[classical conditioning]].
   
  +
Additionally NLP holds that anchors can be deliberately set and triggered verbally, through touch, or other unique stimulus, to assist self or others access 'resourceful' or other target states.<ref name="Krugman 1985">Krugman, Martin, ''et al.'', (1985): "Neuro-linguistic programming treatment for anxiety: Magic or myth?." Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. Aug, Vol. 53(4) pp. 526-530.</ref> Anchoring appears to have been imported into NLP from family therapy as part of the 'model' of [[Virginia Satir]].<ref name="Haber 2002">Haber, Russell, (2002): Virginia Satir: An integrated, humanistic approach Contemporary Family Therapy, Vol 24(1), Mar 2002,p32 pp. 23-34 ISSN 1573-3335 {{DOI|10.1023/A:1014317420921}}</ref>
NLP theory explains these breathing and mental processing according to the varying levels of chemical composition in the blood that affects the brain, and “Visual” people tend to be fast visual thinkers and can seem untrustworthy to “kinesthetic” thinkers because thinking by feeling is inherently slow {{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}. It is further claimed that matching VAK predicates can build rapport with individuals.
 
Some authors {{ref|bradbury}}{{ref|Molden}} use internal Verbal/Auditory/Kinesthetic strategies in order to categorize people within a thinking strategies or [[learning styles]] framework for instance, that there exist visual, kinesthetic or auditory types of manager.
 
   
  +
====Swish====
===Meta-model and Milton Model===
 
  +
The swish pattern is a process that is designed to disrupt a pattern of thought from one that used to lead to an unwanted behavior to one that leads to a desired behavior. This involves visualizing a 'cue' that leads into the unwanted behavior, such as a smoker's hand moving towards the face with a cigarette in it, and reprogramming the mind to 'switch' to a visualization of the desired outcome, such as a healthy looking person, energetic and fit. In addition to visualization, auditory sound effects are often imagined to enhance the experience.<ref name="Masters et al 1991">Masters, B Rawlins, M, Rawlins, L, Weidner, J. (1991) "The NLP swish pattern: An innovative visualizing technique. Journal of Mental Health Counseling. Vol 13(1) Jan 1991, 79-90. " </ref> Swish is one of the techniques that involves the manipulation of [[submodalities (NLP)|submodalities]].
The [[metamodel | meta-model]] is a set of thirteen language patterns {{ref|id_magic1}} developed from their observations of Virginia Satir and Fritz Perls, and is proposed as an information gathering tool, and to challenge (theoretical) distortions, generalizations or deletions in the speaker's language {{ref|id_MagicI}}. The meta-model can be reduced to the asking "What specifically", or "How specifically?" to clarify unspecified syntactic elements {{ref|precision}}.
 
   
  +
====Reframing====
The meta-model involves the identification of the abandoned theoretical concepts of Chomsky's [[transformational grammar]] {{ref|id_magic1}}{{ref|whispering}}. These are distortions, generalizations, and deletions. However, in contrast with Chomsky's abandoned theory and with linguistics theory, distortions, generalizations and deletions are universals according to NLP, and are applied directly from untested theory to empirically untested application Levelt (1995).
 
   
  +
In NLP, [[Reframing (NLP)|reframing]] is the process whereby an element of communication is presented so as to shift an individual's perception of the meanings or "[[Framing (social sciences)|frames]]" attributed to words, phrases and events. By changing the way the event is perceived "responses and behaviors will also change. Reframing with language allows you to see the world in a different way and this changes the meaning. Reframing is the basis of jokes, myths, legends, fairy tales and most creative ways of thinking."<ref name=Joseph O'Connor">Joseph O'Connor ''NLP: A Practical Guide to Achieving the Results You Want: Workbook'' Harper Collins 2001</ref> The concept was common to a number of therapies prior to NLP.<ref name="Sharpley 1987"/> For example, it appeared in the approaches of [[Virginia Satir]], [[Fritz Perls]] and [[Milton Erickson]] and in [[brief therapy|strategic therapy]] of [[Paul Watzlawick]].<ref name="Sterman 1990">Sterman, CM (1990) Neuro-Linguistic Programming in Alcoholism Treatment. Haworth Press. ISBN 1560240024 p.</ref> There are examples in children's literature. [[Pollyanna]] would play [[The Glad Game]] whenever she felt down about life, to remind herself of the things that she could do, and not worry about the things she couldn't.<ref name="Mills 1999">Alice Mills (1999) ''Pollyanna and the not so glad game.'' Children's Literature. Storrs: 1999. Vol.27 pg. 87, 18 pgs</ref>
The inverse of the meta-model is the Milton-model {{ref|patterns1}}{{ref|patterns2}} a collection of "artfully vague" language patterns {{ref|reframing|appendix II}} elicited from the work of [[Milton H. Erickson]]. It is said that the use of non-specific language patterns can allow the client to make their own meaning for what is being said.
 
   
  +
====Six step reframe====
==Varying Concepts==
 
  +
An example of reframing is found in the '''[[Reframing (NLP)|six-step reframe]]''' which involves distinguishing between an underlying intention and the consequent behaviors for the purpose of achieving the intention by different and more successful behaviors. It is based on the notion that there is a positive intention behind all behaviors, but that the behaviors themselves may be unwanted or counterproductive in other ways. NLP uses this staged process to identify the intention and create alternative choices to satisfy that intention.
====Meaning of "Neuro" in NLP====
 
[[image:Engram_Trace_and_NLP_V-K_Circuit3.JPG|200px|thumbnail|right|Explaining the neuro in NLP in relation to V-K modalities''(click to enlarge)'']]
 
   
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====Well-formed outcome====
All NLP literature refers to the altering of one's neurology through the neural pathways of the senses and the neural circuits of the brain. Most current NLP literature mentions no more than the reprogramming of mental habits and associations. However, the [[Engram]][http://www.conts.com/learn.html] is used within NLP to explain how NLP works [http://www.dicopsy.com/programmation-neuro-linguistique.htm][http://www.ressources.be/articles/34emotions.htm]
 
  +
In NLP this is one of a number of 'frames' wherein the desired state is considered as to its achievability and effect if achieved. A positive outcome must be defined by the client, be within the client's power to achieve, retain the positive products of the unwanted behaviours and produce an outcome that is appropriate for all circumstances.<ref name="Dilts & Delozier 2000">{{cite book | last = Dilts | first = Robert B | coauthors = DeLozier, Judith A | title = Encyclopedia of Systemic Neuro-Linguistic Programming and NLP New Coding | publisher = NLP University Press |date= 2000 | url = http://www.nlpuniversitypress.com/ | id = ISBN 0970154003}}</ref>
{{ref|Levelt1995}}{{ref|Drenth_2003}}. Some practitioners theorize that NLP processes can be explained through the neurological concepts of programming and reprogramming [[engrams]] {{ref|Sinclair1992}}[http://www.conts.com/learn.html Extract]. Within NLP, Engrams are proposed to give a patterned response which has been stabilized at the level of [[unconscious competence]] {{ref|Derks_1985}}{{ref|Sinclair1992}}[http://www.conts.com/learn.html].
 
   
====Brain lateralization====
+
====Ecology and congruency====
  +
Ecology in NLP deals with the relationship between a client and their natural, social and created environments and how a proposed goal or change might relate to their relationships and their environment. It is a frame within which the desired outcome is checked against the consequences in the client's life and relationships.{{Fact|date=July 2007}} Like [[gestalt therapy]]<ref name="Schabracq 2003">Schabracq, M. (2003) "Everyday Well-Being and Stress in Work and Organisations" In '''The Handbook of Work and Health Psychology''' Schabracq, Winnubst & Cooper (Eds.) John Wiley and Sond. p.15</ref> a goal of NLP is to help the client choose goals and make changes that achieve a sense of personal congruency and integrity with personal and other aspects of the client's life.
Hemispheric differences (''brain lateralization'') is used to support assumptions in some versions of NLP. Robert Dilts propose eye movements (and sometimes gestures) correspond to visual/auditory/[[kinesthesia | kinesthetic]] representations systems and to the specific regions in the brain {{ref|id_magic1}}{{ref|Dilts_et_al1980}}{{ref|modeling_with_nlp}}. For example, the left side is said to be more logical/analytical than the right side, which is said to be more creative/imaginative {{ref|patterns2|pp.10,87}} or that regions of the brian are specialised for certain functions such as mathematics or language {{ref|magic1}}{{ref|OConnor}}.
 
   
====NLP Models====
+
====Parts integration====
  +
'''[[Perceptual positions|Parts Integration]]''' is based on the idea that different aspects of ourselves are in conflict due to different perceptions and beliefs. 'Parts integration' is the process of negotiating with and integrating the disparate aspects of the self by identifying and then negotiating with the separate parts to achieve resolution of internal conflict. . Successful parts negotiation occurs by listening to and providing opportunities to meet the needs of each part, and adequately addressing their interests so that they are each satisfied with the desired outcome. It often involves negotiating with the conflicting parts of a person to achieve resolution. Parts integration appears to be modeled on 'parts' from [[family therapy]] and has similarities to [[ego-state therapy]] in psychoanalysis in that it seeks to resolve conflicts that constitute a "family of self" within a single individual.
Aside from the fundamental [[Metamodel]], [[Milton Model]], and [[Representational Systems]], NLP proponents also did research in beliefs, [[meta program]]s, the [[George A. Miller]]'s [[T.O.T.E.]] model. Longstanding practitioners [[Robert Dilts]] and Judith Delozier claim that the [[SMART (project management)|SMART]] model, amongst others are also part of NLP{{ref|Dilts_2000}}.
 
   
====New Age====
+
==Research reviews==
  +
{{main|NLP and science| List of studies on Neuro-linguistic programming}}
NLP is largely a [[New Age]] development, and is often promoted in combination with other related new age developments. This is partly due to related New Age notions that were common at the time of development, such as Dianetics promoted by Perls and the [[enneagram]] promoted by Virginia Satir (REF) and also a result of practitioners modeling spiritual concepts. Bandler often used anecdotes and metaphors about the occult in his workshops and large group awareness training [[LGAT]] seminars {{ref|Sourcebook}} and teaches workshops in practical shamanism. Some practioners claim that NLP can be used to “create both positive (+) and negative (-) psychic energy which operate at polar opposites from each other”{{ref|Spirit_of_NLP}}.
 
   
  +
===Counseling psychology research===
====Alternate Brands====
 
Individual trainers have often introduced or idiosyncratically developed their own methods, concepts and labels, branding them under the "NLP" name {{ref|Carrol_2003}}:
 
   
  +
In 1984, Sharpley, researching for [[counseling psychology]], undertook a literature review of 15 studies on the existence and effectiveness of [[representational systems (NLP)|preferred representational systems]] (PRS), an important underlying principle of NLP, and found "little research evidence supporting its usefulness as an effective counseling tool" and no reproducible support for preferred representational systems and predicate matching.<ref name="Sharpley 1984">Sharpley, C. F. (1984). Predicate matching in NLP: A review of research on the preferred representational system. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 31(2), 238-248.</ref> Einspruch and Forman (1985) broadly agreed with Sharpley (1984) but disputed the conclusions, identifying a failure to address methodological errors in the research reviewed. They stated that "NLP is far more complex than presumed by researchers, and thus, the data are not true evaluations of NLP"<ref name="Sharpley 1984"/> adding that NLP is difficult to test under the traditional [[counseling psychology]] framework. Moreover the research lacked a necessary understanding of pattern recognition as part of advanced NLP training, there was inadequate control of context, an unfamiliarity with NLP as an approach to therapy, inadequate definitions of rapport and numerous logical mistakes in the research methodology.<ref name="Einspruch & Forman 1985">{{cite journal | author=Einspruch, Eric L., Forman, Bruce D. | title=Observations Concerning Research Literature on Neuro-Linguistic Programming | journal=Journal of Counseling Psychology | year=1985 | volume=32(4) | pages=pp. 589-596}}</ref> Sharpley (1987) responded to Einspruch and Forman (1985) with a review of a further 7 studies on the same basic tenets (totalling 44 including those cited by Einspruch and Forman).<ref name="Sharpley 1987">{{cite journal | author=Sharpley C.F.| title=Research Findings on Neuro-linguistic Programming: Non supportive Data or an Untestable Theory| journal=Communication and Cognition | year=1987 | volume=Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1987 Vol. 34, No. 1 | pages=103-107,105 | url=http://eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/Home.portal?nfpb=true&_pageLabel=RecordDetails&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=EJ352101&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno&objectId=0900000b8005c1ac}}</ref> This second review included Elich et al (1985), a study that found no support for the proposed relationship between [[eye movements]], [[spoken predicates]], and [[mental imagery|internal imagery]]. Elich et al stated that "NLP has achieved something akin to cult status when it may be nothing more than a psychological fad" (p625)".<ref name="Elich 1985">Elich, M., Thompson, R. W., & Miller, L. (1985). [http://eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/Home.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=RecordDetails&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=EJ327573&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno&objectId=0900000b800561ca Mental imagery as revealed by eye movements and spoken predicates: A test of neurolinguistic programming]. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 32(4), 622-625. note: "psychological fad"p.625</ref> However, Sharpley (1987) stated that a number of NLP techniques are worthwhile or beneficial in [[counseling psychology]], citing predicate matching, mirroring clients behaviors (e.g.[[rapport (NLP)]]), [[submodalities|moving sensory modalities]], [[reframing]], [[anchoring]] and changing history, but said that none of these techniques originated within NLP: "NLP may be seen as a partial compendium rather than as an original contribution to counseling practice and, thereby, has a value distinct from the lack of research data supporting the underlying principles that Bandler and Grinder posited to present NLP as a new and magical theory". He concluded that "if NLP is presented as a theory-less set of procedures gathered from many approaches to counseling, then it may serve as a reference role for therapists who wish to supplement their counseling practice by what may be novel techniques to them."<ref name="Sharpley 1987"/>
*John Grinder teaches New Code of NLP
 
*[[Anthony Robbins]] teaches NAC (Neuro Associative Conditioning<sup>TM</sup>)
 
*Michael Hall teaches Neuro Semantics<sup>TM</sup>
 
*Tad James teaches Advanced Neuro Dynamics<sup>TM</sup> & Time Line Therapy<sup>TM</sup>
 
*Richard Bandler himself now teaches his own offshoot of NLP, called DHE ([[Design Human Engineering]]<sup>TM</sup>)
 
*Margo Anand promotes a form of NLP called SkyDancing Tantra<sup>TM</sup>
 
   
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===National Research Council evaluation===
== Background and Applications ==
 
===Background===
 
One of the earliest influences on NLP were [[General Semantics]] ([[Alfred Korzybski]]) as a new perspective for looking at the world which included a kind of [[mental hygiene]]. This was a departure from the [[Aristotle|Aristotelian]] concepts of modern science and objective reality, and it influenced notions of programming the mind. Korzybski General semantics influenced several schools of thought, leading to a viable [[human potential]] industry and associations with emerging [[New Age]] thinking. By the late [[1960s]], self-help organizations such as [[Erhard Seminars Training|EST]], [[Dianetics]], and [[Scientology]] had become financially successful. The [[Esalen]] human potential seminars in California began to attract people, such as the therapist and dianetics proponent Fritz Perls {{ref|Naranjo}}, as well as [[Gregory Bateson]], Virginia Satir, and Milton H. Erickson.
 
   
  +
In 1988 at the request of the US Army, the [[United States National Research Council|National Research Council]] evaluated several highly marketed "New age" human performance enhancement technologies.<ref name="Druckman & Swets 1998" /> Twenty five years later, Druckman stated that "we found little if any evidence to support NLP’s assumptions or to indicate that it is effective as a strategy for social influence. It assumes that by tracking another’s eye movements and language, an NLP trainer can shape the person’s thoughts, feelings, and opinions (Dilts, 1983). There is no scientific support for these assumptions". But he says, "we were impressed with the [[modeling (NLP)|modeling]] approach used to develop the technique. The technique was developed from careful observations of the way three master psychotherapists conducted their sessions, emphasizing imitation of verbal and nonverbal behaviors (Druckman & Swets, 1988, Chapter 8). This then led the committee to take up the topic of expert modeling in the second phase of its work."<ref name="druckman2004"/> However, the second phase on expert modeling that followed that were inspired by NLP were done outside the field of NLP.<ref name="druckman2004">Druckman, Daniel (2004) "[http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bell/jasp/2004/00000034/00000011/art00002 Be All That You Can Be: Enhancing Human Performance]" ''Journal of Applied Social Psychology'', Volume 34, Number 11, November 2004, pp. 2234-2260(27)</ref>
While at [[Kresge College]], [[University of California, Santa Cruz]], John Grinder then an Assistant Professor of [[linguistics]] was invited by Richard Bandler, then a fourth year undergraduate student to visit his Gestalt therapy group {{ref|whispering}}. Between 1973-1979, under the mentorship of [[Gregory Bateson]], the co-founders collaborated, and published several books including ''The Structure of Magic Volumes I & II (1975, 1975a)'', ''Changing with families'' and ''Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of Milton H. Erickson, Volumes I & II (1977, 1978)'' based on the patterns of [[Fritz Perls]], [[Virginia Satir]], [[Milton H. Erickson]]{{ref|whispering}}.
 
   
  +
===Decrease in research interest===
The practice of neuro-linguistic programming attracted mostly therapists at first although it eventually attracted business people, sales people, artists, and "new-agers" {{ref|Meta-States}}. As it expanded, Leslie Cameron-Bandler, [[Judith DeLozier]], [[Stephen Gilligan]], [[Robert Dilts]], and David Gordon (Therapeutic Metaphors, 1978) made further contributions to NLP and the seminars of Bandler and Grinder were transcribed by Steve Andreas into a book, ''[[Frogs into Princes]]''. This was published in 1979 and drove the demand for seminars which in turn became successful human potential attractions {{ref|tools_for_dreamers}}.
 
{{ClinPsy}}
 
Since the mid [[1990s]] NLP has become more widespread, and following the example of Richard Bandler (who attempted legal action to claim the bulk of the field as his own personal intellectual and commercial property because he could not resolve the dispute through the use of NLP {{ref|salerno}}. The dispute between Bandler and Grinder over trademarks and copyright was resolved in court of California in 2000 who deemed NLP a generic term {{ref|whispering|Appendix}} {{ref|salerno}}.
 
   
  +
Sharpley's reviews marked the decline in research interest in NLP, in particular matching sensory predicates and its use in counselor-client relationship in counseling psychology.<ref name="Gelso and Fassinger 1990">''Gelso and Fassinger (1990) "Counseling Psychology: Theory and Research on Interventions" ''Annual Review of Psychology''</ref>
===Applications===
 
Much of NLP is now largely targeted for niche markets (particularly commercialized, cut down or self-help usage), and may be more controversial or esoteric, sometimes [[charismatic]]ally or evangelistically taught {{ref|eisner2000}}. Some of the original developers, notably Richard Bandler and the stage hypnotist Paul McKenna, have encouraged these trends and the resulting fragmentation and move towards "pop NLP" has discredited the subject in the eyes of many people {{ref|salerno}}.
 
   
  +
==Therapeutic practice==
NLP is sometimes applied to coaching and for personal or business development, including motivational communication and systems thinking {{ref|Pasztor_1998}}. NLP is often promoted as [[LGAT|large group]] seminars, similar to or in combination with [[Landmark Forum]] seminars [http://www.about-nlp.com/nlp-and-landmark.html].
 
   
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===Approaches===
Some of these involve day long, or several day periods of large group awareness activities including the introduction of authority figure guest speakers and promotion of [[New Age]] products. For example, Anthony Robbins promotes NLP as a "systemic approach for change" through his seminars [http://www.refreshedmedia.com/tony-robbins/unleash-the-power-within/london-2005/tony-robbins-unleash-the-power-within-london-2005-tickets.shtml], and other products. NLP trainers and consultants are now applying NLP rituals and techniques in some HR application areas.
 
  +
{{See also|Therapeutic use of NLP (NLPt)}}
   
  +
NLP and variants were influenced by ([[Gestalt therapy]], [[family systems therapy]]) and have influenced (eg. [[SFBT|brief therapy]], [[Neuro-linguistic psychotherapy]], hypnotherapy) number approaches to psychotherapy. NLP has remained an eclectic field with no inherent controls over training or a [[ethical code|professional code of ethics]]. According to Schutz in his guide to NLP training, training varies from very short, esoteric or hyped-up power courses at one extreme to 9 months of professional training under licensed psychotherapists or the equivalent. He advises caution in selection.<ref name="schütz">{{cite web | author=Schütz, P. | title=A consumer guide through the multiplicity of NLP certification training | url=http://www.nlpzentrum.at/institutsvgl-english.htm | publisher=. | accessdate=December 2006}}</ref><ref name="Platt 2001">{{cite web | author=Platt, G. | title=NLP - No Longer Plausible? | url=http://www.sueknight.co.uk/Publications/Articles/NLP_Plausible.htm | publisher=. | accessdate=2001}}</ref>
====NLP "Therapy"====
 
NLP is considered a fringe or alternative therapy {{ref|Raso_1994}}. Although several aspects of NLP have been found to be largely ineffective {{ref|Singer1996}}, NLP is used, or suggested as an approach, by a few mental health bodies, including the National Phobics Society of Great Britain [http://www.phobics-society.org.uk/therapylocations.shtml], MIND [http://www.herts.ac.uk/services/counselling/How_to_Assert_Yourself.pdf] (PDF), [http://www.usu.edu/health/eatingdisorders.htm], the British Stammering Association [http://www.stammering.org/options_additional.html], the Center for Development & Disability at the University of New Mexico Center for autism [http://cdd.unm.edu/discuss/resources/],[http://www.asca.org.au/survivors/survivors_counselling.html]. Around 1978, NLP practitioner certification was set up as a 20 day program with the aim of training therapists to apply NLP as an adjunct to their professional qualifications. In Europe, the [http://www.eanlpt.org/ European NLP therapy association] has been promoting their training in line with European therapy standards.
 
   
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===Professional associations===
====New Age and Occult Applications====
 
NLP's [[New Age]] background, deriving from such notions as Zen spirituality and Dianetics promoted by Perls {{ref|Naranjo}} and the [[enneagram]] promoted by Virginia Satir (REF) and the modeling spiritual concepts, has led to variability in the use of occult notions in NLP. For example, Bandler often used anecdotes and metaphors about the occult in his workshops and large group awareness training [[LGAT]] seminars {{ref|Sourcebook}} and teaches workshops in practical shamanism. Proponents state that NLP is compatible with any religion or spiritual context {{ref|OConnor}}.
 
   
  +
NLP has been coordinated within some [[#Associations|industry association]]s, psychotherapy associations, and has been used or suggested as an approach by some mental health bodies.<ref name="mental health bodies">NLP is used or suggested as an approach by some mental health bodies:
==Scientific analysis of NLP==
 
  +
*[http://www.phobics-society.org.uk/therapylocations.shtml National Phobics Society of Great Britain]
NLP has been [[empirical]]ly tested over many years and many of its models and methods have been found to be largely ineffective {{ref|Singer1996}}.
 
  +
*[http://www.phobics-society.org.uk/therapylocations.shtml ''National Phobics Society of Great Britain: List of treatments and help'']
  +
*[http://www.herts.ac.uk/services/counselling/How_to_Assert_Yourself.pdf Mental Health Promotions: How to Assert Yourself]
  +
*[http://www.usu.edu/health/eatingdisorders.htm USU The Student Health and Wellness Center: What are Eating Disorders?]
  +
*[http://cdd.unm.edu/discuss/resources/ ''Center for Development & Disability at the University of New Mexico Center for autism'']
  +
*[http://www.asca.org.au/survivors/survivors_counselling.html ''Advocates of Child Abuse Survivors: Counselling and therapy'']</ref>. NLP is used as an adjunct by therapists in other disciplines and also as a therapy in its own right as NLPt.
  +
NLP has influenced some corporate executive coaches who provide one-on-one training and collaborative relationships to executives interested in development skills in career or business and may help resolve related personal issues.<ref name="Bluckert 2004">Peter Bluckert (2004) The state of play in corporate coaching: current and future trends. ''Industrial and Commercial Training''. Guilsborough Vol.36(2) p.53</ref>{{Fact|date=January 2007}}. A number of UK NHS regional authorities use NLP for staff training at various levels, for training in rapport and communication in the workplace and with patients <ref>[http://www.institute.nhs.uk/NR/rdonlyres/7CB979CF-8BF6-4C45-9A1F-2B80DD2CA707/0/3_1HD_Nov05.pdf]p.28 [http://www.nscstha.nhs.uk/4856/Clinical%20Professions%20Group.pdf]p 27[http://www.networks.nhs.uk/uploads/westyorks/academy%20DISW%20jan-july%2006.pdf]p.27</ref> and for personal development in management training. <ref>[http://www.greenpark.n-i.nhs.uk/pubinfo/Training_and_Development_Programme.pdf][http://www.anlp.org/casestudies.asp?ID=13]</ref> The Society of Medical NLP runs courses for health professionals for techniques to be used in clinical practice in consultations. These techniques were originally based on modeling Doctors who communicate successfully with patients.<ref>[http://www.gktgazette.com/2003/oct/features.asp]</ref> Their courses are accredited for PDP and CPD (formerly Post Graduate Education Allowance). <ref>[http://medicalnlp.com/html/about_us.html]</ref>. NLP techniques are included in the DOC Guidance Counselors handbook. <ref>Guidance Counselor's handbook, section 1.4.5: http://www.ncge.ie/resources_handbooks_guidance.htm section 1.4.5 [http://www.ncge.ie/handbook_docs/Section1/NLP_Guide_Sch.doc] (DOC)</ref>
   
  +
===Lack of scientific validation===
In relation to current understanding of neurology and perception, NLP is in error (Bertelsen, 1987), and instead of being grounded in contemporary, scientifically derived neurological theory, NLP is based on outdated metaphors of brain functioning and is laced with numerous factual errors (Druckman and Swets 1988).
 
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Psychologists, Singer and Lalich, criticized the 'quick-fix' attitude in NLP and the marketing that continues to refer to its originators as scientists and to NLP as a 'science', 'technology' and 'hi-tech psychology'.<ref name="Singer & Lalich 1997">{{cite book | author= Singer, Margaret & Janja Lalich | title=[[Crazy Therapies]]: What Are They? Do They Work? | publisher=Jossey Bass | year=1997 | id=0787902780 | p.169- 172}}</ref> Drenth (1999) questioned the value and popularity of NLP given that its concepts and conclusions were not based on experimental data and empirical testing. Furthermore the typical retort of proponents that the efficacy of NLP is self-evident or that a therapeutic approach does not have to be entirely scientific is not sufficient for therapeutic practice.<ref name="Drenth 1999"/> He goes on to say that "Unlike diagnosis, prediction of human performance or behavior, and assessment, therapy is not an (applied) scientific activity. Criteria for therapeutic activity is effectiveness, not verity;" ... "But what brings some of these therapeutic approaches into the category of [[pseudoscience]] is the claim that their presumptions are predicated on scientific understanding and scientific evidence."<ref name="Drenth J.D.(2003)"> Pieter J.D. Drenth (2003) [http://www.allea.org/pdf/17.pdf Growing anti-intellectualism in Europe; a menace to science in ALLEA Annual Report] pp.60-72'</ref> Drenth was critical of Harry Adler's 1994 book titled ''NLP: Neuro Linguistic Programming the New Art and Science of Getting What You Want'' for its scientific pretence.<ref name="Drenth 1999">Drenth, P. (1999) [http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=1256010 Prometheus chained: Social and ethical constraints on psychology]. Vol. 4.4 pp.233-239 ''European psychologist''</ref> In response Adler says that NLP is both an art and a science. It has a history even shorter than the young (and soft) science of psychology. He says that the 'science' in his book might imply well-researched rigor, but maintains that he does not claim the models of NLP are in any way formal or predictive models. In contrast, NLP is inherently subjective, involving the unconscious mind, therefore the system is as rigorous as one might expect under the circumstances.<ref name="Adler 2002">Adler, H. (2002) Handbook of NLP: A Manual for Professional Communicators. Gower Publishing, Ltd. Note: See chapter: "Art of science?"</ref>
   
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There is a concern about the public's overconfidence in [[mental health profession]]als given the general lack of scientific foundation in the mental health professions. Scott Lilienfeld says that "largely untested treatments comprise a major proportion—in some cases a majority—of the interventions delivered by mental health professionals."<ref name="Lilienfeld 2002"> {{cite journal | author= Lilienfeld, S.O. | title= Our Raisson D’etre | journal= The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice | year=2002 | url= http://www.srmhp.org/0101/raison-detre.html | volume=1(1) | pages=20}}</ref> Further he says that proof of the validity of new practices fall on the proponents of these practices. Scott O. Lilienfeld, Steven J. Lynn and Jeffrey M. Lohr (2002) criticize many unvalidated techniques, including NLP, that are currently being applied in clinical psychology. In particular trauma treatments current taught in workshops—[[EMDR]], [[TFT]], VK/D (a technique derived from NLP), etc.—with little or no empirical support.<ref name="Lilienfeld 2004">Scott O. Lilienfeld, Steven Jay Lynn, Jeffrey M. Lohr (eds) (2004) [http://www.amazon.com/gp/reader/1593850700/ Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology]</ref>
The [[1988]] US National Committee (a board of 14 prepared scientific experts) report found that "Individually, and as a group, these studies fail to provide an empirical base of support for NLP assumptions...or NLP effectiveness. The committee cannot recommend the employment of such an unvalidated technique"{{ref|Druckman_1988}}. In addition, Edgar Johnson, technical director of the Army Research Institute heading the NLP focused Project Jedi stated that "Lots of data shows that NLP doesn't work"{{ref|Squires}}. NLP has failed to yield convincing evidence for the NLP model, and failed to provide evidence for its effectiveness {{ref|Heap_1989}}.
 
   
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===Comparison with cognitive behavior therapies===
The conjecture that a person has a preferred representational system (PRS), which is observed in the choice of words, has been found to be false according to rigorous research reviews {{ref|Heap_1989}}{{ref|Platt_2001}}. The assertion that a person has a PRS which can be determined by the direction of eye movements found even less support {{ref|Heap_1989}}{{ref|Platt_2001}}.
 
   
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[[Cognitive behavioral therapy]], currently the most prevalent form of [[psychotherapy]] for the treatment of mental health disorders, has some conceptual and historical similarities to NLP. Lewis Walker, author of ''Changing with NLP'' stated that "NLP and CBT had not only paralleled each other's rise over the years, but also shared similar basic assumptions about in individuals in health and disease. Indeed, it became clear to me that there had also been a major cross-fertilsation of ideas and techniques between the two therapies."<ref name="Walker 2004">Lewis Walker (2004) [http://books.google.com/books?lr=&pg=PR5&dq=&id=8K1aSWHFNSwC&ots=dLtS1iiAnR&output=html Changing With Nlp: A Casebook of Neuro-linguistic Programming in Medical Practice]</ref> Both are based on the idea that people act and feel based on their perception or maps of the world rather than the actual world ([[the map is not the territory]]) and involve an information processing perspective of mind. Both Cognitive therapy and NLP seek to identify and change "distorted" or "unrealistic" ways of thinking, and therefore to influence emotion and behavior (compare [[cognitive distortions]] of CBT with [[Meta model (NLP)|meta model]] of NLP). Both involve "[[reframing (NLP)|reframing]]" and advise that behaviour change greatly facilitates the integration of new, more beneficial beliefs.<ref name="Walker 2004"/> But they operate with different definitions of unconscious processes, and CBT assigns them "a less central role in influencing behaviour".<ref name="">David E. Gray (2006) Executive Coaching: Towards a Dynamic Alliance of Psychotherapy and Transformative Learning Processes. Management Learning 2006; 37; 475 {{DOI|10.1177/1350507606070221}}</ref> In contrast to the little empirical support for NLP in the literature, [[cognitive behavioral therapy]] and its forerunner [[cognitive therapy]] has been empirically validated and is widely used for the treatment of mental health and behavioral disorders, including major depressive disorders and anxiety disorders.<ref name="Beck 2005">Aaron T. Beck: "The Current State of Cognitive Therapy: A 40 Year Retrospective", ''Archives of General Psychiatry'', 62: 953 - 959, Sep 2005 </ref><ref>Treatment Recommendations for Patients with Major Depressive Disorder (Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients With Major Depressive Disorder, Second Edition). American Psychiatric Association (2000). Retrieved on 2006-07-02.</ref>
A single critique by Einspruch and Forman (1985) stated that Sharpley's{{ref|Sharpley1984}} review of NLP contained methodological errors. However, Sharpley refuted this and provided further experimental evidence to demonstrate that NLP is ineffective and in error in both method and model{{ref|Sharpley1987}}.
 
   
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===Commercialization, manipulation and persuasion===
Thus, objective empirical studies {{ref|Heap_1989}}{{ref|Bertelsen_1987}}{{ref|Bliemeister_1998}} and review papers {{ref|Druckman_1988}}{{ref|Platt_2001}} have consistently shown NLP to be ineffective and reviews or meta-analysis have given NLP a conclusively negative assessment, and the reiterated statement is that there is no neuro-scientific basis for any of NLP's claims, or any scientific support for its claimed efficacy {{ref|Sharpley1987}}{{ref|Drenth_2003}}{{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}{{ref|Singer1996}}{{ref|eisner2000}}.
 
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{{Main|Persuasion uses of NLP}}
   
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==Popular culture and media==
Due to general disillusionment with NLP, its mention in psychotherapy journals and books is becoming increasingly rare {{ref|efran}}. NLP proponents have provided not one iota of scientific support for their claims, and as such NLP is considered inappropriate for thorough clinical studies {{ref|eisner2000}}.
 
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{{stub-section}}
   
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===Mind reading and magic===
Professor Robert Carrol {{ref|Carrol_2003}} states that it is impossible to determine a "correct" NLP model, and that applying one particular model to everyone is over-simplistic and will be no substitute for hard earned expertise and cannot be verified through statistical methods.
 
   
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In 2003, English [[mentalist]] [[Derren Brown]] often performs stunts and magical tricks on British television. One stunt Brown played [[Derren_brown#Russian_Roulette|Russian roulette]] with 5 players picked from an audience of 100. Skeptical, Glenn Wilson, a psychologist at Kings College London, said it was a magic trick and Brown probably used stooges who acted as if they were from the audience. Wilson doubted Brown's [[mind reading]] and influence capability. Others who believed that the stunt was more than mere magic, claim that Brown used NLP, [[cold reading]] and indirect suggestion to inform the participants which chamber the bullet was located.<ref>[http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/thisweek/story/0,12977,1058573,00.html Was Derren Brown really playing Russian roulette - or was it just a trick?] by Alok Jha, October 9, 2003, [[The Guardian]]</ref> Brown has stated that an interest developing skills in reading non-verbal signals reading and indirect suggestion was initially spurred by NLP.<ref name="Brown 2000">{{cite book | author=Brown, Derren | title=Pure Effect: Direct Mindreading and Magical Artistry | location= | publisher=H&R Magic Books | year=2000 | url= | pages=107,110 }}</ref>
The fact that some people perceive NLP to work sometimes can be explained by the [[placebo effect]], [[social pressure]], superficial symptomatic rather than core treatment, and overestimating some apparent successes while ignoring, downplaying, or explaining away failures {{ref|Beyerstein_1997}}.
 
   
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===Other television features===
==Criticism==
 
Critics say NLP is simply a half-baked conflation of pop psychology and pseudoscience that uses [[jargon]] to disguise the fact that it is based on a set of banal, if not incorrect, presuppositions (Sanghera 2005). NLP has been criticized by clinical psychologists, management scholars, linguists, psychotherapists and cult awareness groups, concerning ineffectiveness, pseudoscientific explanation of linguistics and neurology, ethically questionable, cult-like characteristics, and promotion by exaggerated claims.
 
   
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In 2005, celebrity hypnotist and television personality [[Paul McKenna]] was shown applying NLP and other techniques on his [[Sky One]] show, 'I Can Change Your Life' to assist people with [[phobia]]s, such as agoraphobia and addictions to gambling and shopping. In 2006, another Sky One programme, 'I Can Make You Thin', featured [[Richard Bandler]] and used NLP among other techniques to help people lose weight. <ref>[http://www.skyone.co.uk/mckenna/]</ref>
===False claims to science===
 
Critics say that NLP often associates itself with "science of communication" {{ref|patterns2|p.81}} in order to raise its own prestige {{ref|Singer1999}} and anthropologists such as Winkin consider such promotion to be intellectually fraudulent {{ref|Winkin1990}}. Furthermore, some critics assert that NLP's association with science is as distant as [[astrology]]'s association to [[astronomy]]{{ref|Winkin1990}}.
 
   
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==History and development==
As with any other science, theory is central to behavioral science. However, Gregory Bateson in page ix of the ''Structure of Magic Volume I'' claims that, "The behavioral sciences, and especially psychiatry, have always avoided theory..." {{ref|id_magic1}}. The co-originators have also stated, "We are not psychologists, and we're also not theologians or theoreticians" {{ref|frogs}}. However, proponents claim that the [[Milton-model]] is based on the behavioral patterns of [[Milton H. Erickson]] and that if these patterns can be 'formalized it will make a solid foundation for a science of communication' (1977 p.81) yet Grinder & Bostic St Clair (2001) say that "the coding phase of NLP modeling is at present an art"{{ref|whispering|p.127}}. Some proponents have marketed exaggerated claims about NLP such as false connections to neuroscience and have marketed the original developers as 'scientists' {{ref|Singer1999}}. Advertising bodies in the UK have asked for NLP proponents to avoid promoting NLP as a new science [http://www.cap.org.uk/NR/exeres/5BF23A13-5B07-4C56-A54D-516A9237380E.htm].
 
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{{main|History of neuro-linguistic programming}}
   
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===1970s: Founding and early development===
[[Psycholinguist]] Willem Levelt states that (translated into English) "NLP is not informed about linguistics literature, it is based on vague insights that were out of date long ago, their linguistics concepts are not properly construed or are mere fabrications, and conclusions are based upon the wrong premises. NLP theory and practice has nothing to do with neuroscientific insights or linguistics, nor with informatics or theories of programming" {{ref|Drenth_2003}}[http://www.skepsis.nl/nlp.html].
 
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NLP was co-founded and developed jointly by [[Richard Bandler]] and then UCSC assistant professor of linguistics [[John Grinder]], under the tutelage of noted [[anthropologist]] [[Gregory Bateson]], at the [[University of California, Santa Cruz]], during the 1970s. At that time the Californian [[human potential movement|human potential seminars]] were developing into a viable industry. Gregory Bateson (see [[Esalen Institute]]) was influenced by [[Alfred Korzybski]], particularly his ideas about human modeling and that '[[the map is not the territory]]'. These ideas were adopted by Bandler and Grinder.<ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1975a"/>
   
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From 1972, the co-founders of NLP had an interest in the exceptional communications skills of gestalt therapist [[Fritz Perls]], family therapist [[Virginia Satir]] and founding president of the American Society for Clinical Hypnosis, [[Milton H. Erickson]]. Subsequently ''Structure of Magic Series (1975)'' and ''Patterns of Milton H. Erickson (1976, 1977)'' were published using those therapists as models. In the late 1970s, [[Leslie Cameron-Bandler]], [[Judith DeLozier]], [[Robert Dilts]], and [[David Gordon]] worked with the co-founders and separately to contribute to the development of NLP.
===Pseudoscience===
 
NLP has been classed as a [[pseudoscience|pseudoscientific]] self help development {{ref|Levelt1995}} {{ref|Williams_2000}}{{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}{{ref|Drenth_2003}}, in the same mold as [[EST]] (Landmark Forum) and [[Dianetics]](Scientology). Authors such as Salerno (2005) also state NLP is pseudoscience, and have criticized its promotion as self-help, and psychologists such as Singer {{ref|Singer1999}} and management experts such as {{ref|Hardiman_1994}} have criticized quasi-spiritual and unethical uses within management and human resources developments. [[The National Council Against Health Fraud]] classify NLP is a "dubious therapy"{{ref|NCAHF}}.
 
   
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===1980s: New developments and scientific assessment===
Numerous extraordinary and unsupported claims have been made by some NLP promoters. There have been claims that the hightening of perception using NLP can allow a novice martial artist to beat an expert {{ref|Bandler1993|p.105}}, and that it is possible to develop photographic memory through the use of NLP {{ref|id_magic2}}.
 
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In the 1980s, shortly after publishing ''Neuro-linguistic Programming Volume 1''<ref name="Dilts et al 1980"/> with Robert Dilts and Judith Delozier, Grinder and Bandler fell out. Amidst acrimony and intellectual property lawsuits, NLP started to be developed haphazardly by many individuals. Given the multiplicity of developers and trainers, there was to be no single definitive system of NLP.<ref name="Druckman & Swets 1998">Druckman and Swets (eds) (l988) [http://darwin.nap.edu/books/0309037921/html/133.html Enhancing Human Performance: Issues, Theories, and Techniques], National Academy Press.</ref>
   
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Since the early 1980s, John Grinder collaborated with various people to develop a form of NLP called the [[New Code of NLP]] which attempted to restore a whole mind-body systemic approach to NLP <ref>Turtles all the way down, 1987., Whispering in the Wind, 2001</ref>
Historically, NLP has many pseudoscientific associations such as the explicit and implicit erroneous adherence to Dianetic's subconscious engram concept [http://www.media13.com/18559/Nurturing_the_Brain_using_Neuro-Linguistic_Programming.html][http://www.conts.com/learn.html], claims to rapid cures and treatment of traumas, the use of popular new age myths such as unlimited potential, left/right brain simplicities, past life regression, and the use marketing/recruitment models similar to that of Dianetics (Scientology) and other cults {{ref|Sala1999}}.
 
   
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Richard Bandler also published new processes based on [[Submodalities (NLP)|submodalities]] and [[Ericksonian hypnosis]]. <ref>eg. ''Using Your Brain: For a Change (1984)'', Persuasion Engineering, Design Human Engineering and recent works.</ref>
Pseudoscience is prone to certain fallacies and characteristics. These can be; Overgeneral predictions, pseudoscientific experimentation, dogmatic adherence or recycling of un-validated claims {{ref|Winn_2001}}[http://www.xenu.net/archive/baloney_detection.html]. The characteristics of pseudoscience are more specifically shown thus {{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}} [http://www.guilford.com/excerpts/lilienfeld.pdf]:
 
   
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[[Anthony Robbins]] who taught NLP in the late 1970s, mass marketed various motivational products incorporating aspects of NLP (renamed as ''[[Neuro Associative Conditioning]]'').
*The use of obscurantist language (eg [[meta program]]s, parapragmatics, sub-modalities etc)
 
*The absence of [[Connectivity (graph theory)|connectivity]] {{ref|Levelt1995}}
 
*Over-reliance on testimonial and [[anecdotal evidence]] {{ref|Krugman_1985}}
 
*An overuse of ad hoc hypotheses and reversed [[burden of proof]] designed to immunize claims from falsification {{ref|Singer1999}}
 
*Emphasis on confirmation rather than refutation (eg reliance on asking how rather than why)
 
*Absence of [[boundary conditions]]
 
*The mantra of [[holism in science|holism]] and eclecticism designed to immunize from verifiable efficacy {{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}(Claiming that NLP is unmeasurable due to too many factors or to simplistically “do what works”{{ref|eisner2000}}.
 
*Evasion of [[peer review]] (If claims were true, why were they not properly documented and presented to the scientific community?) {{ref|eisner2000}}
 
*Reversed [[burden of proof]] (away from those making claim (NLP promoters), and towards those testing the claim (Scientists)).
 
   
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In the late 1980s, Sharpley's (1984, 1987) research reviews in experimental [[counseling psychology]] and by the [[United States National Research Council]] gave NLP an overall negative assessment marking a decrease in NLP research interest.
Pseudoscientific arguments tend to contain several or all of these factors, as can be seen in this example [http://www.bradburyac.mistral.co.uk/nlpfax09.htm] that shows ad hoc hypotheses and holistic argument as an attempt to explain away the negative findings, and an emphasis on confirmation and reversed burden of proof etc.
 
   
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===1990s: Controversy, division, and marketing===
Critics point of that NLP is based on outdated metaphors of brain functioning and is laced with numerous factual errors {{ref|Druckman_1988}}. Modern neuroscience indicates that NLP's notions of neurology are erroneous and pseudoscientific in regards to: left/right brain hemispheric differences {{ref|Sala1999}}{{ref|Dilts2000}}{{ref|Drenth_2003}}, the association of eye movements or body gestures to brain hemispheres, and in the universal division of humanity to 40% visual, 40% auditory and 20% kinesthetic [http://www.nwlink.com/~donclark/hrd/learning/styles.html], in the adherence of NLP to positive/negative and psychic out of body energy {{ref|Sala1999}}. NLP is also based on some of Freud's most flawed and pseudoscientific thinking that has been rejected by the mainstream psychology community for decades{{ref|eisner2000}}.
 
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In July of 1996 after many years of legal controversy, Bandler filed a lawsuit against John Grinder et al, claiming retrospective sole ownership of NLP, and the sole right to use the term under trademark.<ref name="nlp knowledge centre">Cite web: [http://web.archive.org/web/19990224225605/http://www.nlp.com.au/action/state.htm 'NLP Knowledge Centre']</ref><ref name="nlp schedule">Cite web: [http://www.nlpschedule.com/random/lawsuit-nlpc.html 'NLP Schedule']</ref> Contemporaneous with Bandler's suits in the [[Supreme Court of the United States]]{{Fact|date=January 2007}}<!-- Please check that this was the correct court. -->, [[Tony Clarkson]] (a UK practitioner) successfully asked the UK High Court to revoke Bandler's UK [[registered trademark]] of "NLP", in order to clarify legally that 'NLP' was a generic term rather than intellectual property.<ref name="anlp news">Cite web: [http://web.archive.org/web/20010406091232/www.anlp.org/anlpnews.htm#law ''ANLP News: NLP Matters'']</ref>
   
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Despite the NLP community being [[History of neuro-linguistic programming#Splintered|splintered]], most NLP material acknowledges the early work of the co-founders, Bandler and Grinder, and the development group that surrounded them in the 1970s.
===Ethical Concerns===
 
Ethical concerns of NLP’s encouragement towards [[manipulation]] have been raised. As such, NLP is seen as encouraging people to find more ways to manipulate individuals against their will within seduction, sales and business settings. NLP book titles include "The Unfair Advantage in Sales" and "The Science and Technology of Getting What You Want" and “Get Anyone to Do Anything”.
 
   
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===2000s: Legal settlement and government regulation===
The therapy and coaching fields require an ethical code of conduct (eg: [http://www.pacfa.org.au/scripts/content.asp?pageid=ETHICSPAGEID Psychotherapy and Counseling Federation of Australia Ethical Guidelines]). It has been found that NLP certified practitioners often show a weak grasp of ethics {{ref|Hardiman_1994}}.
 
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In 2001, the law suits were settled with Bandler and Grinder agreeing to be known as co-founders of NLP. Since 1978, a 20 day NLP practitioner certification program had been in existence for training therapists to apply NLP as an adjunct to their professional qualifications. As NLP evolved, and the applications began to be extended beyond therapy - new ways of training were developed and the course structures and design changed. Course lengths and style vary from institute to institute. In the 1990s, following attempts to put NLP on a more formally regulated footing in the UK, other governments began certifying NLP courses and providers, such as in Australia for example, where a [http://www.ntis.gov.au/?/AccreditedCourse/21576VIC graduate certificate]in Neuro-linguistic programming is accredited under the [[Australian Qualifications Framework|Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF)]].<ref name="ntis">Cite web: [http://www.ntis.gov.au/?/AccreditedCourse/21576VIC ''NTIS: Graduate Certificate in Neuro-linguistic programming'']</ref>However, NLP continues to be an open field of training with no 'official' best practice. With different authors, individual trainers and practitioners having developed their own methods, concepts and labels, often branding them as "NLP",<ref name="skepdic">{{cite web | author=Carroll, Robert T. | title=The Skeptic's Dictionary | url=http://skepdic.com/neurolin.html | publisher=. | accessdate=2003}}</ref> the training standards and quality differ greatly.<ref name="schutz"/> In Europe, the [http://www.eanlpt.org/ European NLP therapy association]has been promoting their training in line with European therapy standards. The multiplicity and general lack of controls has led to difficulty discerning the comparative level of competence, skill and attitude in different NLP trainings. According to Peter Schütz the length of training in Europe varies from 2-3 days for the hobbyist, to 35-40 days over at least nine months to achieve a professional level of competence.<ref name="schutz">Peter Schütz (Accessed 24th December 2006) [http://www.nlpzentrum.at/institutsvgl-english.htm A consumer guide through the multiplicity of NLP certification training: A European perspective]</ref>
   
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==Classifying NLP==
In addition, "Ethical standards bodies and other professional associations state that unless a technique, process, drug, or surgical procedure can meet requirements of clinical tests, it is ethically questionable to offer it to the public, especially if money is to change hands"{{ref|Beyerstein_1997}}. NLP is also criticised for unethically encouraging the belief in non existent maladies and insecurities by otherwise normal individuals{{ref|salerno}}.
 
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{{See also|NLP and science}}
   
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===Associations with science===
NLP has also been described as a "[[commerce|commercial]] cult", and has been criticised within the business sector for being coercive, including undue and forced adoption of fundamental beliefs and intense confrontational psychological techniques, tantamount to forced religious conversion {{ref|Singer1995}}. Its various forms, such as those promoted by Grinder, and Tony Robbins are said to be ill conceived and coercive in some business settings {{ref|Hardiman_1994}}.
 
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NLP's association with science has been complex and controversial. [[Robert Dilts]] and [[Judith Delozier]] claim "NLP is rooted in the synthesis of three areas of modern science: [[neurophysiology]], [[linguistics]] and [[cybernetics]] ([[computer programming]])."<ref name="Dilts & Delozier 2000">{{cite book | last = Dilts | first = Robert B | coauthors = DeLozier, Judith A | title = Encyclopedia of Systemic Neuro-Linguistic Programming and NLP New Coding | publisher = NLP University Press |date= 2000 | url = http://www.nlpuniversitypress.com/ | id = ISBN 0970154003}}</ref> Grinder & Bostic St Clair (2001) make suggestions about what needs to be done next to "improve the practice [of NLP] and take its rightful place as a scientifically based endeavor with its precise focus on one of the extremes of human behavior: excellence and the high performers who actually do it."<ref name="Grinder & Bostic St Clair 2001">{{cite book | author=Grinder, John & Carmen Bostic St Clair | title=Whispering in the Wind | publisher=CA: J & C Enterprises. | year=2001 | pages= | id=ISBN 0-9717223-0-7}}</ref> They ask those interested to work with researchers in [[cognitive linguistics]] and [[neuroscience]] to begin to improve the relationship with those fields.
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In the introduction to ''The Structure of Magic Series'', [[Gregory Bateson]] says that Bandler and Grinder "create the beginnings of an appropriate theoretical base for the describing of human interaction......Grinder and Bandler "have succeeded in making linguistics into a base for theory and simultaneously into a tool for therapy."<ref name="Bandler & Grinder 1975a">{{cite book | author=Bandler, Richard & John Grinder | title=The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy | location=Palo Alto, CA | publisher=Science & Behavior Books | year=1975}}</ref>
   
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However, psycholinguist Willem Levelt (as quoted in Drenth 1999) stated that "NLP is not informed about linguistics literature, it is based on vague insights that were out of date long ago, their linguistics concepts are not properly construed or are mere fabrications, and conclusions are based upon the wrong premises."... "NLP theory and practice has nothing to do with [[neuroscience|neuroscientific]] insights or [[linguistics]], nor with [[informatics]] or theories of [[computer programming|programming]]".<ref name="Drenth 1999" /><ref name=levelt>Willem Levelt (1996) [http://www.skepsis.nl/nlp.html Hoedt u voor Neuro-Linguïstisch Programmeren!] Skepter Vol.9(3)</ref> Cognitive neuroscience researcher Michael C Corballis (1999) agrees and says that "NLP is a thoroughly fake title, designed to give the impression of [[rigor|scientific respectability]]."<ref name="Corballis 1999">Corballis, MC. (1999). Are we in our right minds? In S. Della Sala (ed.), Mind myths (pp. 26-42). Publisher: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-98303-9 p.41</ref>
===Questionable Applications===
 
Currently, there is criticism from psychotherapists about the promotion of NLP and other dubious therapies within psychotherapy associations {{ref|Lilienfeld_2003}}{{ref|eisner2000}}. NLP certification for therapists in general still does not require any professional qualifications {{ref|eisner2000}}.
 
   
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===Humanistic psychology===
[[image:NLP-Scientology_of_achievement2.JPG|300px|thumbnail|right|Critical view of NLP and pseudoscience]]
 
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Grinder and Delozier (1984) argue that the epistemology of Gregory Bateson (and NLP) attempts to synthesize the overdrawn positions of [[empiricists]] and [[idealists]].<ref name="Grinder & Delozier 1984">{{cite book | author=Grinder, John & Judith DeLozier | title=Turtles All the Way Down: Prerequisites to Personal Genius | publisher=Scots Valley, CA: Grinder & Associates. | year=1987 | id=ISBN 1-55552-022-7}}</ref>. Robert Dilts and Judith Delozier (2000) say "In considering NLP as a science however, it is important to recognise that the [[epistemology]] of NLP is more 'subjective' and '[[systems theory|systematically]]' oriented than many 'hard' sciences, which tend to be more 'objective' and '[[deterministic]]'. That is the patterns explored and identified by NLP are often necessarily contextual and influenced by the perceptual filters of the observer." ... "As a scientific approach, then, NLP tends to be more '[[qualitative]]' than '[[quantitative]]' and more '[[structuralist]]' than '[[materialistic]]'" ...<ref name="Dilts & Delozier 2000">{{cite book | last = Dilts | first = Robert B | coauthors = DeLozier, Judith A | title = Encyclopedia of Systemic Neuro-Linguistic Programming and NLP New Coding | publisher = NLP University Press |date= 2000 | url = http://www.nlpuniversitypress.com/ | id = ISBN 0970154003}}</ref>
   
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===Technology===
*'''Human Resources''': As with other pseudoscientific subjects, human resource experts such as Von Bergen et al (1997) consider NLP to be inappropriate for management and human resource training [http://www.extension.csuhayward.edu/html/TTR_CRS.HTM]. NLP has been found to be most ineffective concerning influence/persuasion and modeling of skills {{ref|Druckman_1988}}. There is a general view that NLP is dubious and is not to be taken seriously in a business context {{ref|Hardiman_1994}}{{ref|Summers}}. Within management training there have also been complaints towards NLP concerning undue and forced adoption of fundamental beliefs tantamount to a forced religious conversion.{{ref|Singer1995}}
 
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<!-- This sections gives too much weight to critics. It also focuses on Bandler and Robbins who are not representative of all NLP. -->
  +
NLP critic [[Margaret Singer]] quotes Bandler as saying the term NLP was "phrased on the fly from several book titles on the floor of his car one night when a policeman asked his occupation." (p169). She also quotes Bandler as saying "it wasn't my job to do theory" and Tony Robbins as saying, "NLP is heavily [[pragmatic]]: if a tool works, it's included in the model, even if there's no theory to back it up....None of the current NLP developers have done any research to ''prove'' their models correct. The party line is 'pretend it works, try it, and notice the results you get. If you don't get the result you want, try something else'"<ref name="Singer & Lalich 1997">{{cite book | author= Singer, Margaret & Janja Lalich | title=[[Crazy Therapies]]: What Are They? Do They Work? | publisher=Jossey Bass | year=1997 | id=0787902780 | p.169- 172}}</ref>
  +
Labouchere states that "NLP has a very pragmatic, applied focus on what is helpful, what works and how to replicate it (Bandler & Grinder, 1990). While NLP draws on and shares common ground with ‘mainstream’ [[cognitive psychology]], it has, from its inception, continued to develop, refine, and apply its own unique range of concepts, models and techniques." <ref name="Labouchere 2004">Peter Labouchere (2004) [http://www.ee4.org/Papers/EE4_Labouchere.pdf Using participatory story telling, forum theatre and NLP concepts and techniques to create powerful learning experiences around issues of HIV prevention, support and positive living] paper presented at at ''EE4 - Fourth International Entertainment Education Conference''</ref>
   
  +
Partridge (2003) states that "NLP may be best thought of as a system of psychology concerned with the self development of the human being" and "It is concerned with the function of belief rather than its nature. It is not concerned whether a belief is true or not, but whether it is empowering or disempowering". Similarly, [[Stephen J. Hunt]] states that NLP "is a technique rather than an organised religion and is used by several different [[human potential movement]]s"<ref name="Hunt 2003">Hunt, Stephen J. (2003) [http://books.google.com.au/books?vid=ISBN0754634108 Alternative Religions: A Sociological Introduction] ISBN 0-7546-3410-8</ref>. [[David V. Barrett]] (2001) also describes NLP as a technique or series of techniques, or a process. He states that that "the balance comes down against it being labeled as a religion."<ref name="Barrett 2001">David V. Barrett (2001) [http://books.google.com.au/books?vid=ISBN1844030407 The New Believers: A Survey of Sects, Cults and Alternative Religions] Available online from Google Books. pp.434,26</ref>.
Many such courses appear to depend more upon charismatic appeal, wish-fulfillment, quick fixes, and lack of critical faculty, than actual quantifiable results, and so are often considered pure [[pseudoscience]]. The original fad of NLP has undergone further controvercy and abandonment since the further realization that it is simply a faddy cult, and the divorce of Tony Robbins despite his commercial promotion of "Perfect Marriage" counseling has led to a great deal of disenchantment from his own followers (Salerno 2005). The various claims NLP proponents make have no clinical support and are grossly missleading (Eisner 2000).
 
   
  +
==See also==
*'''NLP and Education''': Although NLP has no reliable neuroscience foundation, it is sometimes considered as part of "accelerated learning" or "brain based learning"[http://ce.sbcc.edu/psychology.htm][http://www.athealthce.com/courses/C5907-A36/description_link.cfm?course=C5907-A36&appcourse=y][http://www.nationalwellness.org/TheConference2k4/pdf_files/WPA_APA_ApprovedSessions05.pdf PDF]{{ref|Walberg}}. There is no reliable evidence to support the use of NLP within education, and as such, the use of this unvalidated method is discouraged by educational experts (REF).
 
  +
*[[Cognitive style]]
 
  +
*[[Gestalt therapy]]
*'''Cosmetic Effect Claims''': Dubious treatments such as hypnotic breast enhancement and penis enlargement often claim to use NLP processes to produce this effect (REF). If such miraculous effects had actually been achieved, then why have they not been properly documented by the people making these claims, and presented to the scientific community? {{ref|eisner2000}}.
 
  +
*[[Humanistic psychology]]
 
  +
*[[Hypnotherapy]]
*'''Occult and New Age Practices''': With its promotion with Tai Chi, Meditation, and Dianetics (Scientology), NLP is in the margins of contemporary obscurantism {{ref|Winkin1990}}. NLP is often criticised as being a dubious [[new age]] therapy. Practitioners sometimes attempt to model spiritual experiences, which inherently, are lacking in scientific support. NLP's new age background often leads to it being sold in combination with [[shamanic]] methods of magic such as those by (by Richard Bandler) or [[Huna]] (by Tad James).
 
  +
*[[Interpersonal communication]]
 
  +
*[[Family systems therapy]]
===Cult characteristics===
 
  +
*[[Map/territory relation|The map is not the territory]]
NLP is sometimes referred to in scientific research reviews as a cult {{ref|Heap_1989}}{{ref|Winkin1990}}{{ref|Singer1995}}, and a destructive or amoral pseudoscientific psychocult {{ref|Novopashin}}[http://www.nlp.de/presse/deutschland/eb-0298.htm](eg. NLP Rekaunt[http://www.lib.molod.ru/cgi-bin/lat/HRISTIAN/spiski.txt]), and in research it is often considered to be akin to a cult {{ref|Recovery_from_Cults}}{{ref|singer2003}}{{ref|Tippet1994}}{{ref|eisner2000}}{{ref|Sharpley1987}}. The German educational ministry banned the use of NLP in education due to its close similarity to [[Scientology]] [http://www.nlp.de/presse/deutschland/eb-0298.htm]. Bandler's legal actions have been compared to the vexatious litigation and restriction in freedom of speech of cults such as Scientology [http://www.nlp.biz/NLP/faq22.htm].
 
  +
*[[Neurolinguistics]]
 
  +
*[[Provocative therapy]]
Similar to other pseudoscientific subjects such as Dianetics (Scientology) and EST(Landmark)[http://www.about-nlp.com/nlp-and-landmark.html], NLP is adopted as a pretext for applying ritual, authority control, dissociation, reduced rationalization, and social pressure to obtain compliance from the cult's victim or to induce dependence on the cult {{ref|Recovery_from_Cults}}. For example, the belief in the ubiquity of bad programming (dianetic's engram concept[http://www.conts.com/learn.html] is widely disseminated in NLP books and seminars. Thus, although NLP is ineffective for its stated purposes, it is used as a fake science in a similar way to other psuedoscientific therapies such as primal scream therapy, EST[http://www.about-nlp.com/nlp-and-landmark.html] and Dianetics.
 
  +
*[[Perceptual style]]
  +
*[[Persuasion]]
  +
*[[Sapir–Whorf hypothesis]]
   
 
==Notes and references==
 
==Notes and references==
  +
<!--See [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Footnotes] for an explanation of how to generate footnotes using the <ref(erences/)> tags-->
<div style="font-size: 90%">
 
  +
<div class="reflist4" style="height: 220px; overflow: auto; padding: 3px" >
  +
{{reflist}}
  +
</div>
   
  +
==Further reading==
<!-- Intro -->
 
  +
{{main|Neuro-linguistic programming: Bibliography}}
* {{note|id_magic1}} Bandler, Richard & John Grinder, 1975. ''The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy''. Palo Alto, CA: Science & Behavior Books.
 
  +
<!--Commented out as per Peer review: ''Note: This list was compiled based on the number of citations listed in Google Scholar (accessed: 20th December, 2006).''-->
* {{note|id_magic2}} Bandler, Richard & John Grinder, 1975. ''The Structure of Magic II: A Book About Communication and Change''. Palo Alto, CA: Science & Behavior Books.
 
*:{{note|id_magic2a}} Above source, see pp.12-13,137,179-99.
 
* {{note|patterns1}} Richard Bandler & John Grinder, 1976. ''Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of Milton H. Erickson, M.D. Volume I''. Cupertino, CA :Meta Publications.
 
* {{note|patterns2}} Bandler, Richard, Grinder, John & DeLozier, Judith, 1977. ''Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of Milton H. Erickson, M.D. Volume II''. Meta Publications.
 
* {{note|frogs}} Richard Bandler & John Grinder, 1979. ''Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming''. Moab, UT: Real People Press.
 
*:{{note|frogspg30}} Above source, pg 30.
 
*:{{note|frogspg24}} Above source, pg 24.
 
*:{{note|frogspg15}} Above source, pgs 15 and 45.
 
*:{{note|frogspg52}} Above source, pg 52.
 
* {{note|reframing}} Bandler, Richard & John Grinder, 1983. ''Reframing: Neurolinguistic programming and the transformation of meaning'' Moab, UT: Real People Press.
 
* {{note|Bandler_1993}} Bandler, Richard 1993. ''unknown''.
 
* {{note|id_brain}} Bandler, Richard & John Grinder, 1985. ''Using your brain - for a change''. Palo Alto, CA: Science & Behavior Books.
 
* {{note|ecology}} Gregory Bateson, 1972. ''Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution, and Epistemology'' University Of Chicago Press.
 
* {{note|mind_and_nature}} Bateson, Gregory, 1979. ''Mind and Nature: A Necessary Unity (Advances in Systems Theory, Complexity, and the Human Sciences)''. Hampton Press.
 
*{{Note|Bertelsen_1987}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Bertelsen, Preben & Lars Hem:
 
| title=Om begrebet: klientens model af verden (??: the client's model of the world)
 
| journal=Psyke & Logos
 
| year=1987
 
| volume=2
 
| pages=375-408}}
 
*{{Note|Beyerstein_1997}} Beyerstein. B.L. (1997) [http://www.csicop.org/si/9709/beyer.html Why Bogus Therapies Seem to Work.] Skeptical Inquirer magazine. September/October 1997
 
*{{Note|Bliemeister_1998}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Bliemeister, J
 
| title=Empirische Uberprufung zentraler theoretischer Konstrukte des Neurolinguistischen Programmierens (NLP) (Empirical verification of central theoretical constructs of neurolinguistic programming (NLP).)
 
| journal=Zeitschrift f klinische Psychologie, Forschung und Praxis
 
| year=1988
 
| volume=17(1)
 
| pages=21-30}}
 
*{{Note|bradbury}} ''NLP for business success'', Bradbury, A. Kogan Page, 1997.
 
*{{Note|Bradley_1985}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Bradley, E J & Heinz J Biedermann
 
| title=Bandler and Grinder's Communication Analysis: Its historical context and contribution. | journal=Psychotherapy, Theory and Research
 
| year=1985
 
| volume=22
 
| pages=59-62}}
 
*{{Note|Carbonell_Figley1999}}{{cite journal
 
| author = Joyce L. Carbonell, Charles Figley
 
| title=A Systematic Clinical Demonstration of Promising PTSD Treatment Approaches
 
| journal=TRAUMATOLOGYe
 
| year=1999
 
| volume=5:1, Article 4
 
| pages=-
 
| url=http://www.tir.org/metapsy/traumatology/promising.htm}}
 
*{{Note|Clabby_2004}}{{cite journal
 
| author = John Clabby, PhD, Robert O’Connor, MD
 
| title=Teaching Learners to Use Mirroring: Rapport Lessons From Neurolinguistic Programming
 
| journal=Department of Family Medicine, UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School.
 
| year=2004
 
| volume=Vol. 36, No. 8
 
| pages=3
 
| url=https://www.stfm.org/fmhub/fm2004/September/John541.pdf}}
 
*{{Note|Craft_2001}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Craft A.
 
| title=Neuro-linguistic Programming and learning theory
 
| journal=The Curriculum Journal, Routledge
 
| year=March 2001
 
| volume=Volume 12, Number 1
 
| pages=125-136(12)
 
| url=http://www.ingentaconnect.com/search/article?title=neurolinguistic+programming&title_type=tka&author=craft&year_from=1997&year_to=2005&database=1&pageSize=20&index=1}}
 
*{{Note|Derks_1985}}Derks, L. & Goldblatt, R.,(1985) The Feedforward Conception of Consciousness: A Bridge between Therapeutic Practice and Experimental Psychology. The William James Foundation, Amsterdam.
 
*{{Note|Carrol_2003}}{{Web reference
 
| Author=Carroll, Robert T.
 
| title=The Skeptic's Dictionary
 
| url=http://skepdic.com/neurolin.html
 
| Publisher=.
 
| date=2003}}
 
* {{Note | Dilts_2000 }} {{cite book
 
| last = Dilts | first = Robert B | coauthors = DeLozier, Judith A
 
| title = Encyclopedia of Systemic Neuro-Linguistic Programming and NLP New Coding
 
| publisher = NLP University Press
 
| date = 2000
 
| url = http://www.nlpuniversitypress.com/
 
| id = ISBN 0970154003
 
}}
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg75}} Above source, pg 75.
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg383}} Above source, pg 383.
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg792}} Above source, pg 792
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg938}} Above source, pg 938-943
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg1003}} Above source, pg 1003.
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg1300}} Above source, pg 1300.
 
*:{{Note|Dilts_2000pg1303}} Above source, pg 1303.
 
*{{note|Dilts_et_al1980}} ''Neuro-Linguistic Programming: Volume I - The Study of the Structure of Subjective Experience''; Dilts, Robert B, Grinder, John, Bandler, Richard & DeLozier, Judith A. Meta Publications, 1980.
 
*:{{note|Dilts_et_al1980pg3}} Above source, pgs 3-4.
 
*:{{note|Dilts_et_al1980pg4}} Above source, pg 4.
 
*:{{note|Dilts_et_al1980pg6}} Above source, pg 6.
 
*:{{note|Dilts_et_al1980pg14}} Above source, pg 14.
 
*:{{note|Dilts_et_al1980pg17}} Above source, pg 17.
 
*{{note|spirit}} ''Tools of the spirit''; Dilts, Robert B, McDonald, Robert. NLP University Press, 1997.
 
*{{note|tools_for_dreamers}} ''Tools for Dreamers: Strategies for Creativity'';Dilts, Robert B, Todd Epstein, Robert W Dilts. Palo Alto, CA: Meta Publications, 1991.
 
*{{note|modeling_with_nlp}} ''Modeling With NLP'', Dilts, Robert B. Palo Alto, CA: Meta Publications, 1998.
 
*{{note|cognitive_pattern}} ''Cognitive Patterns of Jesus of Nazareth'', Robert B Dilts. Ben Lomond, CA: Dynamic Learning Publications, 1992.
 
*{{Note|Drenth_2003}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Drenth, J.D.
 
| title=Growing anti-intellectualism in Europe; a menace to science
 
| journal=Studia Psychologica
 
| year=2003
 
| volume=45
 
| pages=5-13.
 
| url=http://www.psychologia.sav.sk/sp/2003/sp1-03.htm#1
 
}}
 
* {{Note | Druckman_1988 }} {{cite book
 
| author = Druckman, Daniel & John A Swets, (Eds)
 
| title = Enhancing Human Performance: Issues, Theories, and Techniques
 
| publisher = Washington DC: National Academy Press
 
| year = 1988
 
| id = ISBN 0309037921
 
| url = http://www.nap.edu/books/0309037921/html
 
| pages = 138-149.
 
}} Retrieved 25 Aug 2005
 
*{{Note|dryden}} Dryden. W. 2001 [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=103324026 Reason to Change: Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT)] Brunner-Routledge 0415229804
 
* {{Note|edwards_1996}} {{cite book
 
| last = Edwards | first = Harry
 
| title = A Skeptic's Guide to the New Age
 
| publisher = [[Australian Skeptics]] (Self-published)
 
| year = 1996
 
| id = ISBN 0-646-24502-3
 
| url = http://www.adam.com.au/bstett/SkepticsNeurolinguisticProg88.htm
 
| pages = 429pp.
 
}}
 
*{{Note|efran}} ''Language, structure, and change: frameworks of meaning in psychotherapy'', Efran, J S. Lukens M.D. Published by W.W. Norton, New York, 1990.
 
*{{Note|eisner2000}} Eisner, D. A. (2000). [http://print.google.com/print?hl=en&id=hmcDl6l8uXwC&q=NLP The death of psychotherapy: From Freud to alien abductions. Westport, CT: Praeger.]
 
*{{Note|Ekman_2003}}Paul Ekman [http://observer.guardian.co.uk/crime/_story/0,13260,942101,00.html Crime Uncovered: You've got the look: Would you lie to me?] The Observer, London (UK): Sunday, April 27, 2003 p.58
 
*{{Note|Einspruch}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Einspruch, E. L & Forman, B. D.
 
| title=Neuro-linguistic programming in the treatment of phobias
 
| publisher=Psychotherapy in Private Practice
 
| volume=6(1)
 
| pages=91-100.
 
| year=1988
 
| url=http://www2.hawaii.edu/~lady/archive/phobia-research-1.html}}
 
*{{Note|John_Interview}} {{Web reference
 
| Author=Grinder, John
 
| title=Interview in London on New Code of NLP
 
| Publisher=Inspiritive, Sydney Australia
 
| url=http://www.inspiritive.com.au/jg.htm
 
| date=2003
 
}}
 
** {{Note | whispering }} {{cite book
 
| last = Grinder | first = John
 
| coauthors = Carmen Bostic St Clair
 
| title = Whispering in the Wind
 
| location = CA | publisher = J & C Enterprises
 
| year = 2001
 
}}
 
* {{Note | precision }} {{cite book
 
| author = Grinder, John, Michael
 
| title = Precision
 
| publisher = Scots Valley, CA: Grinder & Associates
 
| year = 1988
 
}}
 
* {{Note | turtles }} {{cite book
 
| last = Grinder | first = John
 
| coauthors = Judith DeLozier
 
| title = Turtles All the Way Down: Prerequisites to Personal Genius
 
| location = Scoots Valley, CA
 
| publisher = Grinder & Associates
 
| year = 1987
 
| id = ISBN 1555520227
 
}}
 
*{{Note|Spirit_of_NLP}} ''The Spirit of NLP'', Hall, M. Crown House Publishing, 2001.
 
*{{Note|Sourcebook}} ''The Sourcebook of Magic''; Hall, L Michael & Barbara P Belnap. Carmarthen, UK: Crown House Publishing, 1999.
 
*{{Note|Meta-States}} ''Meta-States: Reflexivity in Human States of Consciousness'', Michael L. Hall. CET Publications, Grand Junction, CO., 1994.
 
*{{Note|Hardiman_1994}}Hardiman (1994) NLP background and issues. Industrial relations review and report No 560 May
 
*{{Note|Heap_1988}} Heap. M. (1988) Neurolinguistic programming. In M. Heap (Ed.) Hypnosis: Current Clinical, Experimental and Forensic Practices. London: Croom Helm, pp 268-280.
 
*{{Note|Heap_1989}} Heap, M. (1989) Neurolinguistic programming: What is the evidence? In D Waxman D. Pederson. I,
 
*{{Note|Heap_Hypnotherapy}} Heap.M. Dryden.W. (1991) Hypnotherapy : a handbook. Publisher: Open University Press, 1991.
 
*{{Note|Heap_Hypnosis}} ''Hypnosis: Current Clinical, Experimental and Forensic Practices'', Michael Heap (Ed). London, UK: Croom Helm, 1998.
 
*{{Note|Helisch}} Helisch. M (2004) Veranstaltung:- Gesellschaftliche Funktion, Entwicklung und Sozialisation von Emotionen Seitenzahl: 39 Issue: 1
 
*{{Note|Korzybski_1933}}<cite>[http://print.google.com/print?hl=en&id=KN5gvaDwrGcC&pg=PR7&lpg=PR7&dq=Science+and+Sanity Science and Sanity An Introduction to Non-Aristotelian Systems and General Semantics]</cite>, Alfred Korzybski, Preface by [[Robert P. Pula]], Institute of General Semantics, 1994 (first published 1933), hardcover, 5th edition, ISBN 0937298018
 
*{{Note|Krugman_1985}}Krugman, Kirsch, Wickless, Milling, Golicz, & Toth (1985). [http://content.apa.org/journals/ccp/53/4/526 Neuro-linguistic programming treatment for anxiety: Magic or myth?] Journal of Consulting & Clinical Psychology. Vol 53(4), 526-530.
 
*{{Note|Recovery_from_Cults}} ''Recovery from Cults: Help for Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse'', Michael D Langone (Ed). New York, NY: W W Norton & Company, 1993.
 
*{{Note|Lilienfeld_2003}}Lilienfeld, S.O., Lynn, S.J., and Lohr, J.M., (Eds.) (2003) [http://print.google.com/print?hl=en&id=rZr0DtX2siQC&dq=neurolinguistic&pg=PP1&printsec=0&lpg=PP1&sig=fr0sjxjUdJFdAn22QHij3jvaZ2w Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology]. Guilford Press, New York. ISBN 1-57230-282-1,.
 
*:{{Note|Lilienfeld_2003b}}Above source
 
*{{Note|Levelt1995}} Levelt W. (1995) [http://www.skepsis.nl/nlp.html Hoedt u voor Neuro-Linguistisch Programmeren] Skepter 9(3), september 1996 / Intermediair 17 Nov pp113
 
*{{Note|NCAHF}} unknown author (2001) [http://www.ncahf.org/nl/2001/7-8.html National Council Against Health Fraud. : Jul/Aug 2001 News Vol.24, Iss. 4; pg. 1, 1 pgs]
 
*{{Note|Malloy}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Malloy, T. E., Bostic St Clair, C. & Grinder, J.
 
| title=Steps to an ecology of emergence
 
| journal=Cybernetics & Human Knowing
 
| year=2005
 
| volume=Vol. 11, no. 3
 
| pages=102-119. |url=http://www.psych.utah.edu/stat/dynamic_systems/Content/examples/Ecology-of-Emergence_Galley-proofs_Malloy-et-al.pdf
 
}}
 
*{{Note|Mitchie_2005}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Michie, S, M Johnston, C Abraham, R Lawton, D Parker & A Walker
 
| title=Making psychological theory useful for implementing evidence based practice: a consensus approach
 
| journal=Quality & Safety in Health Care
 
| year=2005
 
| volume=14
 
| pages=26-33
 
| url=http://qhc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/14/1/26}}
 
*{{Note|Dylan}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Morgan, Dylan A
 
| title=Scientific Assessment of NLP (a review of Heap's 1988 conclusions)
 
| journal=Journal of the National Council for Psychotherapy & Hypnotherapy Register
 
| year=1993
 
| volume=Spring 1993
 
| pages=-
 
| url=http://www.mindmotivations.com/article1-nlp-assessment.shtml
 
}} See [http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~dylanwad/morganic/bio_morgan.htm Dylan Morgan bio] Retrieved 25 Aug 2005 Retrieved 24 Aug 2005.
 
*{{Note|Molden}} Molden D. (2000) [http://www.pearson.ch/Business/FinancialTimes/1469/0273650165/NLPBusinessMasterclassSkills.aspx NLP Business Masterclass.] Financial Times Prentice Hall ISBN: 0273650165
 
*{{Note|Naranjo}} ''Gestalt therapy : the attitude & practice of an atheoretical experientialism'', Naranjo. C. Publisher Carmarthen : Crown House Pub., 2000. Pg. 126.
 
*{{Note|Novopashin}} ''Totalitarian Sects and the Democratic State'', Novopashin. A. (2004) "[http://www.lermanet.com/cisar/russia/2004_novosibirsk.htm International Conference in Novosibirsk: 9-11 November 2004]
 
* {{Note | OConnor }} {{cite book
 
| last = O'Connor | first = Joseph
 
| coauthors = Ian McDermott
 
| title = Principles of NLP
 
| location = London, UK | publisher = Thorsons
 
| year = 1996
 
| id = ISBN 0722531958
 
}}
 
* {{Note | Platt_2001 }} {{cite journal
 
| last = Platt | first = Garry
 
| title = NLP - Neuro Linguistic Programming or No Longer Plausible?
 
| journal = Training Journal
 
| year = 2001
 
| volume = May
 
| pages = 10-15
 
| url = http://www.sueknight.co.uk/Publications/Articles/NLP_Plausible.htm
 
}} Retrieved 24 Aug 2005.
 
* {{Note | Pasztor_1998 }}{{cite journal
 
| last = Pasztor | first = A.
 
| title = Subjective Experience Divided and Conquered
 
| journal = Communication and Cognition
 
| year = 1998
 
| volume = Vol. 31, nr.1, Approaching Consciousness, Part II, E. Myin (ed.)
 
| pages = 73-102
 
| url = http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/pasztor98subjective.html
 
}}
 
*{{Note|Raso1994}} Raso,J. 1994 "Alternative" Healthcare: A Comprehensive Guide (Consumer Health Library) Publisher: Prometheus Books (May 1, 1994) ISBN: 0879758910
 
*:{{Note|Raso1994b}} Above source
 
*{{Note|Sala1999}} Sala, S.D, editor (1999) Mind Myths. Exploring Popular Assumptions About the Mind and Brain. Wiley.
 
*{{Note|Salerno_2005}}Salerno, S (2005); Sham : How the Self-Help Movement Made America Helpless. Crown Publishers ISBN 1400054095
 
*{{Note|Sanghera_2005}} ''Look into my eyes and tell me I'm learning not to be a loser'', Financial Times, London (UK), Sanghera. *{{Note|Schacter}}[http://www.wjh.harvard.edu/~dsweb/bio.html Schacter.D] (1997) Searching for Memory: The Brain, the Mind, and the Past. Publisher: Basic Books; ISBN 0465075525
 
*{{Note|Sharpley1987}} ''Research Findings on Neurolinguistic Programming: Nonsupportive Data or an Untestable Theory'', Sharpley C.F. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1987 Vol. 34, No. 1, 103-107 [http://eric.ed.gov/ERICWebPortal/Home.portal?_nfpb=true&_pageLabel=RecordDetails&ERICExtSearch_SearchValue_0=EJ352101&ERICExtSearch_SearchType_0=eric_accno&objectId=0900000b8005c1ac Abstract]
 
* {{Note | Sinclair1999 }} {{cite book
 
| first = Joseph | last = Sinclair
 
| coauthors = Stephen Bray
 
| title = An ABC of NLP
 
| publisher = Self-published (ASPEN)
 
| year = 1992
 
| id = 0951366017
 
}}
 
*{{Note|Squires}}Squires. S. (1988) [http://beyond-the-illusion.com/files/Military/General/ptwizone.txt The Pentagon's Twilight Zone.] The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. : Apr 17, 1988
 
* {{Note | Singer1996 }} {{cite book
 
| last = Singer | first = Margaret | coauthors = Janja Lalich
 
| title = Crazy Therapies : What they are? Do they work?
 
| location = New York, NY | publisher = Jossey Bass
 
| year = 1996
 
| id = 0787902780
 
}} [http://skepdic.com/refuge/crazy.html Review]
 
* {{Note | Singer1995 }}{{cite book
 
| last = Singer | first = Margaret
 
| authorlink = Margaret Singer
 
| title = Cults in Our Midst : The Continuing Fight Against Their Hidden Menace
 
| location = New York, NY | publisher = Jossey Bass
 
| year = 1995
 
| id = ISBN 0787967416
 
}} (see [http://www.factnet.org/Purchase_Books/Cults_in_Our_Midst.htm Reviews], [http://www.forum8.org/forum8/singer/singer_cults.htm Excerpts]) Retrieved 25 Aug 2005
 
* {{Note | Singer1999 }} {{cite book
 
| last = Singer | first = Margaret
 
| coauthors = Janja Lalich
 
| title = unknown
 
| publisher = -
 
| year = 1999
 
}}
 
* {{Note | Singer2003 }} {{cite book
 
| last = Singer | first = Margaret
 
| title = unknown
 
| publisher = -
 
| year = 2003
 
}}
 
*{{Note|Skiner}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Skinner, H. and Stephens, P.
 
| title=Speaking the Same Language: Exploring the relevance of Neuro-Linguistic Programming to Marketing Communications
 
| journal=Journal of Marketing Communications
 
| year=2003
 
| volume=Volume 9, Number 3 / September
 
| pages=177-192
 
| url=http://journalsonline.tandf.co.uk/openurl.asp?genre=article&eissn=1466-4445&volume=9&issue=3&spage=177}}
 
*Strean, H. (1995) PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORY. Kegan Page Publishers
 
*{{Note|Summers}}Summers, Lynn. (Jan 1996) Training & Development. Alexandria, VA: American Society for Training & Development: Vol. 50, Iss. 1; pg. 30, 2 pgs
 
*{{Note|Tippet1994}}{{Citenewsauthor
 
| surname=Tippet
 
| given=Gary
 
| title=Inside the cults of mind control
 
| date=3 Apr 1994
 
| org=Melbourne, Australia: Sunday Age
 
| url=http://www.rickross.com/reference/general/general756.html}} Retrieved 28 Aug 2005
 
*{{Note|Vaihinger_1924}}Vaihinger, H. (1924). [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9009756 The Philosophy of "As If."], Routledge, Kegan and Paul Ltd, London, England
 
*{{Note|VonBergen_1997}}{{cite journal
 
| author=Von Bergen, C W, Barlow Soper, Gary T Rosenthal, Lamar V Wilkinson
 
| title=Selected alternative training techniques in HRD
 
| journal=Human Resource Development Quarterly
 
| year=1997
 
| volume=8(4)
 
| pages=281-294}} (NOTE: [http://hanshananigan.tripod.com/abstracts4.html Abstract] No longer indexed in APA/Psychinfo)
 
*{{Note|Walberg}} Walberg H.J. (2003) Improving Educational Productivity. [http://www.temple.edu/lss/ Laboratory for Student Success.] LSS.
 
*{{Note|Williams_2000}}Williams, W F. general editor. (2000) [http://www.techdirections.com/html/pseudo.html Encyclopedia of pseudoscience: From alien abductions to Zone Therapy,] Publisher: Facts On File, New York.
 
*{{Note|Winkin1990}} Winkin Y 1990 [http://www.lcp.cnrs.fr/pdf/win-90a.pdf Eléments pour un procès de la P.N.L.] , MédiAnalyses, no. 7, septembre, 1990, pp. 43-50.
 
*{{Note|Winn_2001}}Winn, C.M , and Wiggins,A.W (2001) [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&id=PxIeWAwEsaUC&dq=Neuro-linguistic+programming Quantum Leaps, in the wrong direction: Where real science ends and pseudoscience begins.] Joseph Henry Press.
 
   
  +
*Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1979) ''Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming.'' Real People Press. 149 pages. ISBN 0911226192<!--(125 citations)-->
*{{Note|Barrett_2003}}{{Book reference
 
  +
*Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1975) ''The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy'' Science and Behavior Books. 198 pages. ISBN 0831400447<!--(112+ citations) the citations to the German version of this book were excluded from this calculation -->
- | author=Barrett, D. V.
 
  +
*[[Joseph O'Connor (author)|O'Connor, J.]], Seymour, J. Dilts, R. (foreword), Grinder, J. (preface) (1995) ''Introducing Neuro-linguistic Programming: The New Psychology of Personal Excellence'' Aquarian Press. 224 pages. ISBN 1852740736 <!--(53 ciations)-->
- | title=The New Believers - A survey of sects, cults and alternative religions
 
  +
*Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1981) ''Reframing: Neuro-Linguistic Programming and the Transformation of Meaning'' Real People Press. ISBN 0911226257<!--(36 citations)-->
- | publisher=UK, Cassell & Co.
 
  +
*Grinder, J., Bandler, R. (1976) ''Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of [[Milton H. Erickson]] Volume 1'' ISBN 091699001X <!--(31 citations)-->
- | year=2003
 
  +
*[[Robert Dilts|Dilts, R.]] (1990) ''Changing belief systems with NLP'' Meta Publications. ISBN 0916990249 <!--(28 citations)-->
- | id=1844030407
 
  +
*Bandler, R., [[Steve Andreas|Andreas, S.]] (ed) and [[Connirae Andreas|Andreas, C.]] (ed) (1985) ''Using Your Brain-for a Change'' ISBN 0911226273<!--(26 citations)-->
- | url=http://print.google.com/print%3Fq%3D%2522The%2BNew%2BBelievers%2522&sig=B6hmczaVX4QJcqHn82X0410uWjA}}
 
  +
*[[Michael Grinder|Grinder, M.]] Lori Stephens (Ed) (1991) ''Righting the Educational Conveyor Belt'' ISBN 1555520367 <!--(23 citations)-->
- *Barrett, D. (1997) Sects, Cults and Alternative Religions: A World Survey and Sourcebook. Pub Blandford.
 
  +
*[[Genie Laborde|Laborde, G.]] (1987) ''Influencing with Integrity: Management Skills for Communication and Negotiation'' <!--(20 citations)-->
 
  +
*[[Robert Dilts|Dilts, R.]], [[Tim Hallbom|Hallbom, T.]], [[Suzi Smith|Smith, S.]] (1990) ''Beliefs: Pathways to Health & Well-being'' <!--(15 citations)-->
- *{{Note|Bördlein_2001}}Bördlein, Christoph (2001). Das "Neurolinguistische Programmieren" (NLP) - Hochwirksame Techniken oder haltlose Behauptungen? Schulheft, 103 , 117-129.
 
  +
*[[Virginia Satir|Satir, V.]], Grinder, J., Bandler, R. (1976) ''Changing with Families: A Book about Further Education for Being Human'' Science and Behavior Books. ISBN 083140051X <!--(14 citations)-->
 
*{{Note|Brothers_1992}}Brothers B.J. (1992) Spirituality and couples : heart and soul in the therapy process New York : Haworth Press.
 
- *{{Note|Bunge_1993}}Bunge, M. (1993). Realism and Antirealism in Social Science, Theory and Decision (Historical Archive), Volume 35, Number 3, Pages 207-235, Springer Science+Business
 
 
- *Christopher, P. (2004) New Religions: A Guide : New Religious Movements, Sects and Alternative Spiritualities. Oxford University Press ISBN: 0195220420
 
 
*Crabtree, Vexen (2002). [http://www.dpjs.co.uk/cultcontrol.html Ritual Mind Control Tactics]. Retrieved August 28, 2005.<br />See [http://www.vexen.co.uk/vexen/index.html about Vexen Crabtree] Retrieved 28 Aug 2005
 
 
- *{{Note|Derks_1998}}Derks and Hollander (1998) Systemic Voodoo. ISBN 1907388896
 
 
* Gallo, F, (2001) Energy Psychology in Psychotherapy. Norton and Company publishers.
 
- * Gallo, F, (1998) [http://print.google.com/print?hl=en&id=ifquDz9Po6cC&pg=PR11&lpg=PR11&dq=Energy+Psychology+in+Psychotherapy Energy Psychology] Norton and Company publishers.
 
- *{{Book reference
 
- | author=Gordon, David
 
- | title=Therapeutic Metaphors
 
- | publisher=Meta Publications
 
- | year=1978
 
- | id=ISBN 0-916990-04-4}}
 
- *Griffin, N., & Goldsmith, L. (1985, March). The charismatic kid: Tony Robbins, 25, gets rich peddling a hot self-help program. Life, 8, 41-46.
 
- *{{Book reference
 
- | author=Grinder, John & Judith DeLozier
 
- | title=Turtles All the Way Down: Prerequisites to Personal Genius
 
- | publisher=Scoots Valley, CA: Grinder & Associates
 
- | year=1987
 
- | id=ISBN 1555520227}}
 
 
*Howell, Tom (2001). [http://psychicinvestigator.com/demo/Cults.htm Cults and Small Religions]. Retrieved August 29, 2005.
 
 
*James T, Shephard. D, (2001) Presenting Magically: Transforming Your Stage Presence with NLP Crown House Publishing ISBN 1899836527
 
 
- *Lakin, D. (2000) The Unfair Advantage: Sell with NLP! (Paperback) Lakin Associates ISBN: 0967916208
 
- *Leikind, B. J., & McCarthy, W. J. (1991). An investigation of firewalking. In K. Frazier (Ed.)., The hundredth monkey and other paradigms of the paranormal (pp.182-193). Buffalo, NY
 
 
*Overdurf, J, Silverthorn, J (1995) Training Trances: Multi-Level Communication in Therapy and Training Metamorphous Press; 3rd edition ISBN: 1555520693
 
 
</div>
 
 
== See also ==
 
*[[List of NLP topics]]
 
*[[Empiricism]]
 
*[[Epistemology]]
 
*[[Communication]]
 
*[[General Semantics]]
 
*[[Hypnosis]]
 
*[[Humanistic psychology]]
 
*[[Large Group Awareness Training]]
 
*[[Linguistics]]
 
*[[Persuasion]]
 
*[[Soulwork]]
 
*[[Transformational grammar]]
 
   
===Developers===
+
===Associations===
  +
<!--{{unbalanced-section}}-->
*[[Richard Bandler]]*
 
  +
{{Sisterlinks|Neuro-linguistic programming}}
*[[John Grinder]]*
 
  +
*Bandler: [http://www.purenlp.com/society.htm Society of NLP]
*[[Robert Dilts]]
 
  +
*Grinder: [http://www.ITAnlp.com International Trainers Academy of NLP (ITA)]
*[[Leslie Cameron-Bandler]]
 
  +
*Europe-wide: [http://www.eanlpt.org/ EANLPt] - European accrediting organisation for [[Neuro-linguistic psychotherapy|NLPt]]
*[[Judith DeLozier]]
 
  +
*NLP, Coaching, Hypnosis and Neuro-Linguistic Programming [http://www.nlpschedule.com]
*[[Stephen Gilligan]]
 
  +
*Scandinavia-based: [http://www.inlpta.se/ INLPTA Scandinavia]
*[[David Gordon]]
 
  +
*Swiss-based: [http://www.ia-nlp.org International Association for NLP (IANLP)]
(*)Grinder & Bandler are considered the co-creators/co-originators of NLP.
 
  +
*UK-based: [http://www.anlp.org/ Association of NLP], [http://www.professionalguildofnlp.com/ Professional Guild of NLP], [http://www.nlptca.com/ Neuro-linguistic psychotherapy & counselling Association (NLPtCA)], [http://www.bbnlp.com/ GONLP/BBNLP]
   
  +
===Research===
== External links ==
 
*[http://www.nlpwhisperinginthewind.com/ Official Website of John Grinder; co-creator of NLP]
+
*[http://www.jobeq.com/articles/NLP_Research.htm Article on scientific validity of NLP]
*[http://www.richardbandler.com/ Official Website of Richard Bandler; co-creator of NLP]
+
*[http://www.inspiritive.com.au/nlp-research.htm Database and review of academic research]
*[http://www.nlpu.com/ Official Website of Robert Dilts]
+
*[http://www.nlpresearch.org/ NLP and learning research (University of Surrey)]
  +
*[http://www.nlpschedule.com NLP, Neuro Linguistic Programming and Coaching]
*[http://www.jobeq.com/articles/NLP_Research.htm Article addressing the scientific criticism on NLP research]
 
  +
*[http://www.nlpschedule.com NLP, Neuro Linguistic Programming, and Psychometrics]
*[http://www2.hawaii.edu/~lady/archive/history.html Lee Lady's comments about history and development of NLP]
 
*[http://skepdic.com/neurolin.html Criticism from Skeptic's Dictionary]
 
*[http://www.nlptca.com/ Neuro Linguistic Psychotherapy & Counselling Association (UK)]
 
*[http://www.professionalguildofnlp.com Professional Guild of NLP]
 
   
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Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is an unvalidated approach to psychotherapy and a "model of interpersonal communications"[1] based on the subjective study of language, communication and change. It was co-founded by Richard Bandler and linguist John Grinder in the 1970s as a method of personal development. They developed a set of practices and techniques based on modeling successful psychotherapists of the time. However, its application was not limited to psychotherapy, rather they attended to the patterns of interpersonal communications that could be applied generally. Its theoretical foundations borrowed from a range of disciplines, including various psychological fields, linguistics, cognitive science and occupational therapy. NLP and its many variants are taught through seminars, workshops, books and audio programs. The field is loosely spread and resistant to a single comprehensive definition. There is also a great deal of difference between the depth and breadth of training and standards.

An important assumption of NLP is that emotion, thought and behavior consists of, and is influenced by, how the sensory-specific modalities (visual, auditory, kinesthetic, olfactory, gustatory) are organized and give rise to consciousness.[2] Further, the mode and limits to the underlying mental representations is revealed by unconscious choice of words, sensory-specific predicates (eg. visual language) and non-verbal cues (such as intonation; gesture; posture; facial expression and eye movements). A basic method in NLP involves asking specifying questions to help clarify the intended message in communication. It seeks to recover what has been left out and to reframe faulty thinking when the communication is distorted or over-generalised. These meta-model questions are often combined with suggestions for personal growth and potential.[3] Another technique seeks to alter sensory-specific submodalities (eg. brightness, size or location of visual imagery or sensory representations) to affect the intensity of mental states and affect changes in behavior. A classic format has people anchor resourceful mind-body states (eg. creativity, confidence, etc.) to make them available in situations where a person wants to act differently. Generally, the intent of NLP is to increase choice in the underlying representations so that the individual has more choice and flexibility in the world.

In the early 1980s, NLP was heralded as an important advance in psychotherapy and counseling.[4] Reviews of research in counseling psychology at this time found little empirical support for NLP assumptions or effectiveness in the literature, in particular the claim that matching sensory predicates improves rapport and influence.[5][6] The lack of support in the literature reviews marked a significant decrease in research interest.[7] There has been some ongoing research efforts and pleas for further empirical research.[How to reference and link to summary or text] The developers of NLP tend to use analogies to understand and describe their models and tend to rely on intuition, anecdotes and personal experience as evidence as opposed to experimental research. NLP and its related techniques continue to be popular in books and workshops, especially in some areas of psychotherapy, management training, self-help, education and motivational training. NLP is criticized by some evidence based psychologists as a form of New Age psychotherapy that has little, if any, empirical support.[8][9][4]

Concepts and methods

Main article: Methods of neuro-linguistic programming

Map/territory distinction

An important idea in NLP is that a person's point of view perception of their own world is already filtered by biology and beliefs. First there are limitations to what freqencies and wavelengths can be detected at the sensory receptors and, second, there are neurological processes that distort, generalise and delete information before it can ever be perceived in consciousness. So, people tend to think and act based on their best available maps of the world. Even a person with a problem behavior is responding based on the best information they had at the time.[10] Bandler and Grinder credit Alfred Korzybski and his book, Science and Sanity[11], for starting them on the philosophical path for founding NLP, specifically Korzybski's idiom, the map is not the territory that says people should distinguish between the actual world and abstractions of it. In addition, Korzybski's critique of cause-effect thinking influenced an important aspect of the NLP meta model.[12] The aim of much of NLP is to explore the limits of an individuals's map of the world and to offer challenges to expand it.[12][13][14][12]

Modeling exceptional people

Main article: Modeling (NLP)

The co-founders of NLP, Bandler and Grinder, started by observing and replicating three successful psychotherapists, Milton Erickson (hypnotherapy), Virginia Satir (family therapy), and Fritz Perls (gestalt therapy). They were interested in what were the key strategies that made these therapists more successful in their particular area of study. The communications, strategies and language patterns these therapists used became the base for NLP. They wanted to be able to replicate the behaviour of the therapists first before explicating the models, saying '[we] build a model of what they do...we know that our modeling has been successful when we can systematically get the same behavioral outcome as the person we have modeled'.[13] The 'model' is then reduced to a pattern that can be taught to others. NLP modeling methods are designed to unconsciously assimilate the tacit knowledge of what the master is doing, and of which the master is not aware, and can involve modeling "exceptional" people.[15] Describing the NLP modeling process, Einspruch & Forman (1985) stated that "when modeling another person the modeler suspends his or her own beliefs and adopts the structure of the physiology, language, strategies, and beliefs of the person being modeled. After the modeler is capable of behaviorally reproducing the patterns (of behavior, communication, and behavioral outcomes) of the one being modeled, a process occurs in which the modeler modifies and readopts his or her own belief system while also integrating the beliefs of the one who was modeled."[16] Modeling is not confined to therapy, but is applied to a broad range of human learning. Another aspect of modeling is understanding the patterns of one's own behaviors in order to 'model' the more successful parts of oneself.

Meta model

Main article: Meta model (NLP)

Meta-modeling in NLP is the process of carefully questioning the distortions that occur in natural language with the intent of helping someone develop new choice in thinking and behavior. For example, if someone says, "Everyone must love me" the message is overly general as it does not specify any particular person or group of people. That is, the sentence is semantically ill-formed. It therefore raises the question, "Which people, specifically?". Other meta model questions seek to recover unspoken information or challenge distorted information that might be underlying restrictive thinking and beliefs.[12]

It was developed by Bandler and Grinder (1973-1975) based on their imitation of Fritz Perls and Virginia Satir together with Grinder's work with transformational grammar.[12] By listening to and responding to the distortions (generalizations and deletions) in a client's sentences, the practitioner seeks to respond the form of the sentence rather than his or her preconceptions. In contrast, a therapist who 'listens' on the basis of their existing belief systems may miss important aspects.

Milton model

Main article: Milton model

The Milton model is a way of communicating based on the hypnotic language patterns of Milton Erickson.[17] It has been described as "a way of using language to induce and maintain trance in order to contact the hidden resources of our personality".[18] The Milton model has three primary aspects: First, to assist in building and maintaining rapport with the client. Second, to overload and distract the conscious mind so that unconscious communication can be cultivated. Third, to allow for interpretation in the words offered to the client.[19] Furthermore, communicating with metaphor was an essential part of Milton's methods providing a platform whereby Erickson could smoothly deliver his therapeutic suggestions.

Representational systems

Sensory representational systems is a model in NLP concerned with how the different sensory modalities are organised to form the conscious representations of experience. For example, pictorial representation must be modality specific to the visual sensory mode. Similarly ideas featuring sound and touch involve the sensory modality which was involved in its perception. When people are thinking, they form images, sounds together with internal feelings. In NLP, this notion is extended to the performance of any task, such as making conversation, talking about a problem, reading a book, kicking a ball or riding a horse, representations consisting of images, sounds, feelings (and possibly smell and taste) are constantly being formed and activated.[20] It is claimed that the organisation of these representations have a unavoidable impact on performance. It is also claimed that knowledge of the underlying representations, as revealed through the use of spoken predicates, can assist someone in gaining rapport and influence in conversation. In the psychotherapeutic setting, the spoken predicates might be used to gain rapport to influence change. For example, the spoken prediates, "see" and "bright" in "I can see a bright future for myself", such visual language must be modality specific to the visual sensory mode. In "I can feel that we will be comfortable" would involve kinesthetic modality because of the predicates "feel" and "comfortable". In this setting, changes could be thought of as interrupting and replacing representations with more positive and creative alternatives.[21] Some of these ideas of this visual language and alike appear to have been imported from gestalt therapy shortly after its creation.[13]

Submodalities

Main article: Submodalities (NLP)

A submodality in NLP is a distinction of form or structure (rather than content) within a sensory representational system. For example, regardless of the content, both external and mental images of any kind will be either colored or monochrome, and stationary or moving. These parameters are submodalities within the visual modality. Similarly, both remembered and actual sounds will be mono or stereo when experienced internally, so mono/stereo is a submodality of sound. In the late 1970s, the developers of NLP extended the use visual imagery (common in sports psychology and meditation), to submodalities in other sensory modalities. Examples include the relative size, location, brightness of internal images, the volume and direction of internal voices and sounds, and the location, texture, and movement of internally created sensations.[22] A typical submodality intervention involves increasing or decreasing the submodalities of internal representations. This, combined with hypnosis is a feature of Richard Bandler's later work.[23] For example, to increase or decrease the intensity of a certain state, the brightness, colour, or location of the associated internal images are altered. Although NLP did not discover submodalities, it appears that the proponents of NLP may have been the first to systematically use manipulation of submodalities for therapeutic or personal development purposes, particularly phobias, compulsions and addictions.[24]

Principles

Main article: Principles of NLP
  • The map is not the territory[25]
  • Life and mind are systemic processes[26]
  • Behind every behavior there is a positive intention. Even a seemingly negative thought or behavior has a positive function at some level or in some other context.[27]
  • There is no failure, only feedback.
  • The meaning of the communication is the response it produces, not the intended communication.
  • One cannot not communicate: Every behaviour is a kind of communication. Because behaviour does not have a counterpart (there is no anti-behaviour), it is not possible not to communicate. [28]
  • Choice is better than no choice. An idea from cybernetics that holds the most flexible element in a system will have the most influence or choice in that system.[26]
  • People already have all the internal resources they need to succeed.
  • Multiple descriptions are better than one[29]

Techniques

Anchoring

Main article: Anchoring (NLP)

Anchoring is a NLP term for the process by which memory recall, state change or other responses become associated with (anchored to) some stimulus, in such a way that perception of the stimulus (the anchor) leads by reflex to the anchored response occurring. The stimulus may be quite neutral or even out of conscious awareness, and the response may be either positive or negative. Anchors are capable of being formed and reinforced by repeated stimuli, and thus are analogous to classical conditioning.

Additionally NLP holds that anchors can be deliberately set and triggered verbally, through touch, or other unique stimulus, to assist self or others access 'resourceful' or other target states.[30] Anchoring appears to have been imported into NLP from family therapy as part of the 'model' of Virginia Satir.[31]

Swish

The swish pattern is a process that is designed to disrupt a pattern of thought from one that used to lead to an unwanted behavior to one that leads to a desired behavior. This involves visualizing a 'cue' that leads into the unwanted behavior, such as a smoker's hand moving towards the face with a cigarette in it, and reprogramming the mind to 'switch' to a visualization of the desired outcome, such as a healthy looking person, energetic and fit. In addition to visualization, auditory sound effects are often imagined to enhance the experience.[32] Swish is one of the techniques that involves the manipulation of submodalities.

Reframing

In NLP, reframing is the process whereby an element of communication is presented so as to shift an individual's perception of the meanings or "frames" attributed to words, phrases and events. By changing the way the event is perceived "responses and behaviors will also change. Reframing with language allows you to see the world in a different way and this changes the meaning. Reframing is the basis of jokes, myths, legends, fairy tales and most creative ways of thinking."[33] The concept was common to a number of therapies prior to NLP.[5] For example, it appeared in the approaches of Virginia Satir, Fritz Perls and Milton Erickson and in strategic therapy of Paul Watzlawick.[34] There are examples in children's literature. Pollyanna would play The Glad Game whenever she felt down about life, to remind herself of the things that she could do, and not worry about the things she couldn't.[35]

Six step reframe

An example of reframing is found in the six-step reframe which involves distinguishing between an underlying intention and the consequent behaviors for the purpose of achieving the intention by different and more successful behaviors. It is based on the notion that there is a positive intention behind all behaviors, but that the behaviors themselves may be unwanted or counterproductive in other ways. NLP uses this staged process to identify the intention and create alternative choices to satisfy that intention.

Well-formed outcome

In NLP this is one of a number of 'frames' wherein the desired state is considered as to its achievability and effect if achieved. A positive outcome must be defined by the client, be within the client's power to achieve, retain the positive products of the unwanted behaviours and produce an outcome that is appropriate for all circumstances.[24]

Ecology and congruency

Ecology in NLP deals with the relationship between a client and their natural, social and created environments and how a proposed goal or change might relate to their relationships and their environment. It is a frame within which the desired outcome is checked against the consequences in the client's life and relationships.[How to reference and link to summary or text] Like gestalt therapy[36] a goal of NLP is to help the client choose goals and make changes that achieve a sense of personal congruency and integrity with personal and other aspects of the client's life.

Parts integration

Parts Integration is based on the idea that different aspects of ourselves are in conflict due to different perceptions and beliefs. 'Parts integration' is the process of negotiating with and integrating the disparate aspects of the self by identifying and then negotiating with the separate parts to achieve resolution of internal conflict. . Successful parts negotiation occurs by listening to and providing opportunities to meet the needs of each part, and adequately addressing their interests so that they are each satisfied with the desired outcome. It often involves negotiating with the conflicting parts of a person to achieve resolution. Parts integration appears to be modeled on 'parts' from family therapy and has similarities to ego-state therapy in psychoanalysis in that it seeks to resolve conflicts that constitute a "family of self" within a single individual.

Research reviews

Main article: NLP and science

Counseling psychology research

In 1984, Sharpley, researching for counseling psychology, undertook a literature review of 15 studies on the existence and effectiveness of preferred representational systems (PRS), an important underlying principle of NLP, and found "little research evidence supporting its usefulness as an effective counseling tool" and no reproducible support for preferred representational systems and predicate matching.[37] Einspruch and Forman (1985) broadly agreed with Sharpley (1984) but disputed the conclusions, identifying a failure to address methodological errors in the research reviewed. They stated that "NLP is far more complex than presumed by researchers, and thus, the data are not true evaluations of NLP"[37] adding that NLP is difficult to test under the traditional counseling psychology framework. Moreover the research lacked a necessary understanding of pattern recognition as part of advanced NLP training, there was inadequate control of context, an unfamiliarity with NLP as an approach to therapy, inadequate definitions of rapport and numerous logical mistakes in the research methodology.[16] Sharpley (1987) responded to Einspruch and Forman (1985) with a review of a further 7 studies on the same basic tenets (totalling 44 including those cited by Einspruch and Forman).[5] This second review included Elich et al (1985), a study that found no support for the proposed relationship between eye movements, spoken predicates, and internal imagery. Elich et al stated that "NLP has achieved something akin to cult status when it may be nothing more than a psychological fad" (p625)".[38] However, Sharpley (1987) stated that a number of NLP techniques are worthwhile or beneficial in counseling psychology, citing predicate matching, mirroring clients behaviors (e.g.rapport (NLP)), moving sensory modalities, reframing, anchoring and changing history, but said that none of these techniques originated within NLP: "NLP may be seen as a partial compendium rather than as an original contribution to counseling practice and, thereby, has a value distinct from the lack of research data supporting the underlying principles that Bandler and Grinder posited to present NLP as a new and magical theory". He concluded that "if NLP is presented as a theory-less set of procedures gathered from many approaches to counseling, then it may serve as a reference role for therapists who wish to supplement their counseling practice by what may be novel techniques to them."[5]

National Research Council evaluation

In 1988 at the request of the US Army, the National Research Council evaluated several highly marketed "New age" human performance enhancement technologies.[20] Twenty five years later, Druckman stated that "we found little if any evidence to support NLP’s assumptions or to indicate that it is effective as a strategy for social influence. It assumes that by tracking another’s eye movements and language, an NLP trainer can shape the person’s thoughts, feelings, and opinions (Dilts, 1983). There is no scientific support for these assumptions". But he says, "we were impressed with the modeling approach used to develop the technique. The technique was developed from careful observations of the way three master psychotherapists conducted their sessions, emphasizing imitation of verbal and nonverbal behaviors (Druckman & Swets, 1988, Chapter 8). This then led the committee to take up the topic of expert modeling in the second phase of its work."[6] However, the second phase on expert modeling that followed that were inspired by NLP were done outside the field of NLP.[6]

Decrease in research interest

Sharpley's reviews marked the decline in research interest in NLP, in particular matching sensory predicates and its use in counselor-client relationship in counseling psychology.[7]

Therapeutic practice

Approaches

See also: Therapeutic use of NLP (NLPt)

NLP and variants were influenced by (Gestalt therapy, family systems therapy) and have influenced (eg. brief therapy, Neuro-linguistic psychotherapy, hypnotherapy) number approaches to psychotherapy. NLP has remained an eclectic field with no inherent controls over training or a professional code of ethics. According to Schutz in his guide to NLP training, training varies from very short, esoteric or hyped-up power courses at one extreme to 9 months of professional training under licensed psychotherapists or the equivalent. He advises caution in selection.[39][40]

Professional associations

NLP has been coordinated within some industry associations, psychotherapy associations, and has been used or suggested as an approach by some mental health bodies.[41]. NLP is used as an adjunct by therapists in other disciplines and also as a therapy in its own right as NLPt. NLP has influenced some corporate executive coaches who provide one-on-one training and collaborative relationships to executives interested in development skills in career or business and may help resolve related personal issues.[42][How to reference and link to summary or text]. A number of UK NHS regional authorities use NLP for staff training at various levels, for training in rapport and communication in the workplace and with patients [43] and for personal development in management training. [44] The Society of Medical NLP runs courses for health professionals for techniques to be used in clinical practice in consultations. These techniques were originally based on modeling Doctors who communicate successfully with patients.[45] Their courses are accredited for PDP and CPD (formerly Post Graduate Education Allowance). [46]. NLP techniques are included in the DOC Guidance Counselors handbook. [47]

Lack of scientific validation

Psychologists, Singer and Lalich, criticized the 'quick-fix' attitude in NLP and the marketing that continues to refer to its originators as scientists and to NLP as a 'science', 'technology' and 'hi-tech psychology'.[48] Drenth (1999) questioned the value and popularity of NLP given that its concepts and conclusions were not based on experimental data and empirical testing. Furthermore the typical retort of proponents that the efficacy of NLP is self-evident or that a therapeutic approach does not have to be entirely scientific is not sufficient for therapeutic practice.[9] He goes on to say that "Unlike diagnosis, prediction of human performance or behavior, and assessment, therapy is not an (applied) scientific activity. Criteria for therapeutic activity is effectiveness, not verity;" ... "But what brings some of these therapeutic approaches into the category of pseudoscience is the claim that their presumptions are predicated on scientific understanding and scientific evidence."[49] Drenth was critical of Harry Adler's 1994 book titled NLP: Neuro Linguistic Programming the New Art and Science of Getting What You Want for its scientific pretence.[9] In response Adler says that NLP is both an art and a science. It has a history even shorter than the young (and soft) science of psychology. He says that the 'science' in his book might imply well-researched rigor, but maintains that he does not claim the models of NLP are in any way formal or predictive models. In contrast, NLP is inherently subjective, involving the unconscious mind, therefore the system is as rigorous as one might expect under the circumstances.[50]

There is a concern about the public's overconfidence in mental health professionals given the general lack of scientific foundation in the mental health professions. Scott Lilienfeld says that "largely untested treatments comprise a major proportion—in some cases a majority—of the interventions delivered by mental health professionals."[51] Further he says that proof of the validity of new practices fall on the proponents of these practices. Scott O. Lilienfeld, Steven J. Lynn and Jeffrey M. Lohr (2002) criticize many unvalidated techniques, including NLP, that are currently being applied in clinical psychology. In particular trauma treatments current taught in workshops—EMDR, TFT, VK/D (a technique derived from NLP), etc.—with little or no empirical support.[52]

Comparison with cognitive behavior therapies

Cognitive behavioral therapy, currently the most prevalent form of psychotherapy for the treatment of mental health disorders, has some conceptual and historical similarities to NLP. Lewis Walker, author of Changing with NLP stated that "NLP and CBT had not only paralleled each other's rise over the years, but also shared similar basic assumptions about in individuals in health and disease. Indeed, it became clear to me that there had also been a major cross-fertilsation of ideas and techniques between the two therapies."[53] Both are based on the idea that people act and feel based on their perception or maps of the world rather than the actual world (the map is not the territory) and involve an information processing perspective of mind. Both Cognitive therapy and NLP seek to identify and change "distorted" or "unrealistic" ways of thinking, and therefore to influence emotion and behavior (compare cognitive distortions of CBT with meta model of NLP). Both involve "reframing" and advise that behaviour change greatly facilitates the integration of new, more beneficial beliefs.[53] But they operate with different definitions of unconscious processes, and CBT assigns them "a less central role in influencing behaviour".[54] In contrast to the little empirical support for NLP in the literature, cognitive behavioral therapy and its forerunner cognitive therapy has been empirically validated and is widely used for the treatment of mental health and behavioral disorders, including major depressive disorders and anxiety disorders.[55][56]

Commercialization, manipulation and persuasion

Main article: Persuasion uses of NLP

Popular culture and media

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Mind reading and magic

In 2003, English mentalist Derren Brown often performs stunts and magical tricks on British television. One stunt Brown played Russian roulette with 5 players picked from an audience of 100. Skeptical, Glenn Wilson, a psychologist at Kings College London, said it was a magic trick and Brown probably used stooges who acted as if they were from the audience. Wilson doubted Brown's mind reading and influence capability. Others who believed that the stunt was more than mere magic, claim that Brown used NLP, cold reading and indirect suggestion to inform the participants which chamber the bullet was located.[57] Brown has stated that an interest developing skills in reading non-verbal signals reading and indirect suggestion was initially spurred by NLP.[58]

Other television features

In 2005, celebrity hypnotist and television personality Paul McKenna was shown applying NLP and other techniques on his Sky One show, 'I Can Change Your Life' to assist people with phobias, such as agoraphobia and addictions to gambling and shopping. In 2006, another Sky One programme, 'I Can Make You Thin', featured Richard Bandler and used NLP among other techniques to help people lose weight. [59]

History and development

Main article: History of neuro-linguistic programming

1970s: Founding and early development

NLP was co-founded and developed jointly by Richard Bandler and then UCSC assistant professor of linguistics John Grinder, under the tutelage of noted anthropologist Gregory Bateson, at the University of California, Santa Cruz, during the 1970s. At that time the Californian human potential seminars were developing into a viable industry. Gregory Bateson (see Esalen Institute) was influenced by Alfred Korzybski, particularly his ideas about human modeling and that 'the map is not the territory'. These ideas were adopted by Bandler and Grinder.[10]

From 1972, the co-founders of NLP had an interest in the exceptional communications skills of gestalt therapist Fritz Perls, family therapist Virginia Satir and founding president of the American Society for Clinical Hypnosis, Milton H. Erickson. Subsequently Structure of Magic Series (1975) and Patterns of Milton H. Erickson (1976, 1977) were published using those therapists as models. In the late 1970s, Leslie Cameron-Bandler, Judith DeLozier, Robert Dilts, and David Gordon worked with the co-founders and separately to contribute to the development of NLP.

1980s: New developments and scientific assessment

In the 1980s, shortly after publishing Neuro-linguistic Programming Volume 1[60] with Robert Dilts and Judith Delozier, Grinder and Bandler fell out. Amidst acrimony and intellectual property lawsuits, NLP started to be developed haphazardly by many individuals. Given the multiplicity of developers and trainers, there was to be no single definitive system of NLP.[20]

Since the early 1980s, John Grinder collaborated with various people to develop a form of NLP called the New Code of NLP which attempted to restore a whole mind-body systemic approach to NLP [61]

Richard Bandler also published new processes based on submodalities and Ericksonian hypnosis. [62]

Anthony Robbins who taught NLP in the late 1970s, mass marketed various motivational products incorporating aspects of NLP (renamed as Neuro Associative Conditioning).

In the late 1980s, Sharpley's (1984, 1987) research reviews in experimental counseling psychology and by the United States National Research Council gave NLP an overall negative assessment marking a decrease in NLP research interest.

1990s: Controversy, division, and marketing

In July of 1996 after many years of legal controversy, Bandler filed a lawsuit against John Grinder et al, claiming retrospective sole ownership of NLP, and the sole right to use the term under trademark.[63][64] Contemporaneous with Bandler's suits in the Supreme Court of the United States[How to reference and link to summary or text], Tony Clarkson (a UK practitioner) successfully asked the UK High Court to revoke Bandler's UK registered trademark of "NLP", in order to clarify legally that 'NLP' was a generic term rather than intellectual property.[65]

Despite the NLP community being splintered, most NLP material acknowledges the early work of the co-founders, Bandler and Grinder, and the development group that surrounded them in the 1970s.

2000s: Legal settlement and government regulation

In 2001, the law suits were settled with Bandler and Grinder agreeing to be known as co-founders of NLP. Since 1978, a 20 day NLP practitioner certification program had been in existence for training therapists to apply NLP as an adjunct to their professional qualifications. As NLP evolved, and the applications began to be extended beyond therapy - new ways of training were developed and the course structures and design changed. Course lengths and style vary from institute to institute. In the 1990s, following attempts to put NLP on a more formally regulated footing in the UK, other governments began certifying NLP courses and providers, such as in Australia for example, where a graduate certificatein Neuro-linguistic programming is accredited under the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF).[66]However, NLP continues to be an open field of training with no 'official' best practice. With different authors, individual trainers and practitioners having developed their own methods, concepts and labels, often branding them as "NLP",[67] the training standards and quality differ greatly.[68] In Europe, the European NLP therapy associationhas been promoting their training in line with European therapy standards. The multiplicity and general lack of controls has led to difficulty discerning the comparative level of competence, skill and attitude in different NLP trainings. According to Peter Schütz the length of training in Europe varies from 2-3 days for the hobbyist, to 35-40 days over at least nine months to achieve a professional level of competence.[68]

Classifying NLP

See also: NLP and science

Associations with science

NLP's association with science has been complex and controversial. Robert Dilts and Judith Delozier claim "NLP is rooted in the synthesis of three areas of modern science: neurophysiology, linguistics and cybernetics (computer programming)."[24] Grinder & Bostic St Clair (2001) make suggestions about what needs to be done next to "improve the practice [of NLP] and take its rightful place as a scientifically based endeavor with its precise focus on one of the extremes of human behavior: excellence and the high performers who actually do it."[69] They ask those interested to work with researchers in cognitive linguistics and neuroscience to begin to improve the relationship with those fields.

In the introduction to The Structure of Magic Series, Gregory Bateson says that Bandler and Grinder "create the beginnings of an appropriate theoretical base for the describing of human interaction......Grinder and Bandler "have succeeded in making linguistics into a base for theory and simultaneously into a tool for therapy."[10]

However, psycholinguist Willem Levelt (as quoted in Drenth 1999) stated that "NLP is not informed about linguistics literature, it is based on vague insights that were out of date long ago, their linguistics concepts are not properly construed or are mere fabrications, and conclusions are based upon the wrong premises."... "NLP theory and practice has nothing to do with neuroscientific insights or linguistics, nor with informatics or theories of programming".[9][70] Cognitive neuroscience researcher Michael C Corballis (1999) agrees and says that "NLP is a thoroughly fake title, designed to give the impression of scientific respectability."[71]

Humanistic psychology

Grinder and Delozier (1984) argue that the epistemology of Gregory Bateson (and NLP) attempts to synthesize the overdrawn positions of empiricists and idealists.[72]. Robert Dilts and Judith Delozier (2000) say "In considering NLP as a science however, it is important to recognise that the epistemology of NLP is more 'subjective' and 'systematically' oriented than many 'hard' sciences, which tend to be more 'objective' and 'deterministic'. That is the patterns explored and identified by NLP are often necessarily contextual and influenced by the perceptual filters of the observer." ... "As a scientific approach, then, NLP tends to be more 'qualitative' than 'quantitative' and more 'structuralist' than 'materialistic'" ...[24]

Technology

NLP critic Margaret Singer quotes Bandler as saying the term NLP was "phrased on the fly from several book titles on the floor of his car one night when a policeman asked his occupation." (p169). She also quotes Bandler as saying "it wasn't my job to do theory" and Tony Robbins as saying, "NLP is heavily pragmatic: if a tool works, it's included in the model, even if there's no theory to back it up....None of the current NLP developers have done any research to prove their models correct. The party line is 'pretend it works, try it, and notice the results you get. If you don't get the result you want, try something else'"[48] Labouchere states that "NLP has a very pragmatic, applied focus on what is helpful, what works and how to replicate it (Bandler & Grinder, 1990). While NLP draws on and shares common ground with ‘mainstream’ cognitive psychology, it has, from its inception, continued to develop, refine, and apply its own unique range of concepts, models and techniques." [73]

Partridge (2003) states that "NLP may be best thought of as a system of psychology concerned with the self development of the human being" and "It is concerned with the function of belief rather than its nature. It is not concerned whether a belief is true or not, but whether it is empowering or disempowering". Similarly, Stephen J. Hunt states that NLP "is a technique rather than an organised religion and is used by several different human potential movements"[74]. David V. Barrett (2001) also describes NLP as a technique or series of techniques, or a process. He states that that "the balance comes down against it being labeled as a religion."[75].

See also

Notes and references

  1. "neurolinguistic programming n." A Dictionary of Psychology. Andrew M. Colman. Oxford University Press, 2006. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press. 6 September 2007 <http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?subview=Main&entry=t87.e5474>
  2. Bandler, Richard & John Grinder (1975a). The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy]. Palo Alto, CA: Science & Behavior Books., ch.3
  3. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Bandler & Grinder 1976
  4. 4.0 4.1 Devilly GJ (2005) Power therapies and possible threats to the science of psychology and psychiatry Austral NZ J Psych 39:437-445(9)
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Sharpley C.F. (1987). Research Findings on Neuro-linguistic Programming: Non supportive Data or an Untestable Theory. Communication and Cognition Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1987 Vol. 34, No. 1: 103-107,105.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Druckman, Daniel (2004) "Be All That You Can Be: Enhancing Human Performance" Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Volume 34, Number 11, November 2004, pp. 2234-2260(27)
  7. 7.0 7.1 Gelso and Fassinger (1990) "Counseling Psychology: Theory and Research on Interventions" Annual Review of Psychology
  8. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Lilienfeld 2003
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Drenth, P. (1999) Prometheus chained: Social and ethical constraints on psychology. Vol. 4.4 pp.233-239 European psychologist
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 Bandler, Richard & John Grinder (1975). The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy, Palo Alto, CA: Science & Behavior Books.
  11. Alfred Korzybski Science & Sanity
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Bandler and Grinder 1975a
  13. 13.0 13.1 13.2 Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1979). Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming, 149(pp.15,24,30,45,52), Moab, UT: Real People Press.. ISBN 0911226192.
  14. Bandler, Richard & John Grinder (1983). Reframing: Neurolinguistic programming and the transformation of meaning, appendix II,p.171, Moab, UT: Real People Press..
  15. Jacobson, S. (1994) Info-line: practical guidelines for training and development professionals, American Society For Training and Development Alexandria, VA Adapted version available online
  16. 16.0 16.1 Einspruch, Eric L., Forman, Bruce D. (1985). Observations Concerning Research Literature on Neuro-Linguistic Programming. Journal of Counseling Psychology 32(4): pp. 589-596.
  17. Norma Barretta (2004) Review of Hypnotic Language: Its Structure and Use. American Journal of Clinical Hypnosis. Bloomingdale: Jan 2004. Vol.46, Iss. 3; pg. 261, 2 pgs
  18. Joseph O'Connor, John Seymour (2002 (first published 1990)). Introducing NLP, London: HarperCollins. 1855383446.
  19. Pruett, Julie Annette Sikes (2002) The application of the neuro-linguistic programming model to vocal performance training D.M.A., The University of Texas at Austin, 151 pages; AAT 3108499
  20. 20.0 20.1 20.2 Druckman and Swets (eds) (l988) Enhancing Human Performance: Issues, Theories, and Techniques, National Academy Press.
  21. Cooper and Seal (2006) "Theory and Approaches - Eclectic-integrative approaches: Neuro-linguistic programming" In Feldtham and Horton (Eds) The SAGE Handbook of Counselling and Psychotherapy 2e
  22. Tosey, P. Jane Mathison (2003) Neuro-linguistic Programming and learning theory: a response The Curriculum Journal Vol.14 No.3 p.371-388 See also (available online): Neuro-linguistic programming: its potential for learning and teaching in formal education
  23. eg. Bandler, R. (1984) Using your brain for a change
  24. 24.0 24.1 24.2 24.3 Dilts, Robert B; DeLozier, Judith A (2000). Encyclopedia of Systemic Neuro-Linguistic Programming and NLP New Coding, NLP University Press. ISBN 0970154003.
  25. (derived from Alfred Korzybski in "General Semantics" See also Gregory Bateson.).
  26. 26.0 26.1 Cooper, J. & Seal, P. "5.26 Neuro-linguistic programming (p.330)" in Feltham & Horton (eds.) The SAGE Handbook of Counselling And Psychotherapy Sage Publications.
  27. (eg. Six step reframing)
  28. Derived form the work of Gregory Bateson, much of which is collected in Steps to an Ecology of Mind (1972). See also Paul Watzlawick
  29. See also: Steps to an Ecology of Mind).
  30. Krugman, Martin, et al., (1985): "Neuro-linguistic programming treatment for anxiety: Magic or myth?." Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. Aug, Vol. 53(4) pp. 526-530.
  31. Haber, Russell, (2002): Virginia Satir: An integrated, humanistic approach Contemporary Family Therapy, Vol 24(1), Mar 2002,p32 pp. 23-34 ISSN 1573-3335
    1. REDIRECT Template:Doi
  32. Masters, B Rawlins, M, Rawlins, L, Weidner, J. (1991) "The NLP swish pattern: An innovative visualizing technique. Journal of Mental Health Counseling. Vol 13(1) Jan 1991, 79-90. "
  33. Joseph O'Connor NLP: A Practical Guide to Achieving the Results You Want: Workbook Harper Collins 2001
  34. Sterman, CM (1990) Neuro-Linguistic Programming in Alcoholism Treatment. Haworth Press. ISBN 1560240024 p.
  35. Alice Mills (1999) Pollyanna and the not so glad game. Children's Literature. Storrs: 1999. Vol.27 pg. 87, 18 pgs
  36. Schabracq, M. (2003) "Everyday Well-Being and Stress in Work and Organisations" In The Handbook of Work and Health Psychology Schabracq, Winnubst & Cooper (Eds.) John Wiley and Sond. p.15
  37. 37.0 37.1 Sharpley, C. F. (1984). Predicate matching in NLP: A review of research on the preferred representational system. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 31(2), 238-248.
  38. Elich, M., Thompson, R. W., & Miller, L. (1985). Mental imagery as revealed by eye movements and spoken predicates: A test of neurolinguistic programming. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 32(4), 622-625. note: "psychological fad"p.625
  39. Schütz, P.. A consumer guide through the multiplicity of NLP certification training. .. URL accessed on December 2006.
  40. Platt, G.. NLP - No Longer Plausible?. .. URL accessed on 2001.
  41. NLP is used or suggested as an approach by some mental health bodies:
  42. Peter Bluckert (2004) The state of play in corporate coaching: current and future trends. Industrial and Commercial Training. Guilsborough Vol.36(2) p.53
  43. [1]p.28 [2]p 27[3]p.27
  44. [4][5]
  45. [6]
  46. [7]
  47. Guidance Counselor's handbook, section 1.4.5: http://www.ncge.ie/resources_handbooks_guidance.htm section 1.4.5 [8] (DOC)
  48. 48.0 48.1 Singer, Margaret & Janja Lalich (1997). Crazy Therapies: What Are They? Do They Work?, Jossey Bass. 0787902780.
  49. Pieter J.D. Drenth (2003) Growing anti-intellectualism in Europe; a menace to science in ALLEA Annual Report pp.60-72'
  50. Adler, H. (2002) Handbook of NLP: A Manual for Professional Communicators. Gower Publishing, Ltd. Note: See chapter: "Art of science?"
  51. Lilienfeld, S.O. (2002). Our Raisson D’etre. The Scientific Review of Mental Health Practice 1(1): 20.
  52. Scott O. Lilienfeld, Steven Jay Lynn, Jeffrey M. Lohr (eds) (2004) Science and Pseudoscience in Clinical Psychology
  53. 53.0 53.1 Lewis Walker (2004) Changing With Nlp: A Casebook of Neuro-linguistic Programming in Medical Practice
  54. David E. Gray (2006) Executive Coaching: Towards a Dynamic Alliance of Psychotherapy and Transformative Learning Processes. Management Learning 2006; 37; 475
    1. REDIRECT Template:Doi
  55. Aaron T. Beck: "The Current State of Cognitive Therapy: A 40 Year Retrospective", Archives of General Psychiatry, 62: 953 - 959, Sep 2005
  56. Treatment Recommendations for Patients with Major Depressive Disorder (Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Patients With Major Depressive Disorder, Second Edition). American Psychiatric Association (2000). Retrieved on 2006-07-02.
  57. Was Derren Brown really playing Russian roulette - or was it just a trick? by Alok Jha, October 9, 2003, The Guardian
  58. Brown, Derren (2000). Pure Effect: Direct Mindreading and Magical Artistry, 107,110, H&R Magic Books.
  59. [9]
  60. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Dilts et al 1980
  61. Turtles all the way down, 1987., Whispering in the Wind, 2001
  62. eg. Using Your Brain: For a Change (1984), Persuasion Engineering, Design Human Engineering and recent works.
  63. Cite web: 'NLP Knowledge Centre'
  64. Cite web: 'NLP Schedule'
  65. Cite web: ANLP News: NLP Matters
  66. Cite web: NTIS: Graduate Certificate in Neuro-linguistic programming
  67. Carroll, Robert T.. The Skeptic's Dictionary. .. URL accessed on 2003.
  68. 68.0 68.1 Peter Schütz (Accessed 24th December 2006) A consumer guide through the multiplicity of NLP certification training: A European perspective
  69. Grinder, John & Carmen Bostic St Clair (2001). Whispering in the Wind, CA: J & C Enterprises.. ISBN 0-9717223-0-7.
  70. Willem Levelt (1996) Hoedt u voor Neuro-Linguïstisch Programmeren! Skepter Vol.9(3)
  71. Corballis, MC. (1999). Are we in our right minds? In S. Della Sala (ed.), Mind myths (pp. 26-42). Publisher: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 0-471-98303-9 p.41
  72. Grinder, John & Judith DeLozier (1987). Turtles All the Way Down: Prerequisites to Personal Genius, Scots Valley, CA: Grinder & Associates.. ISBN 1-55552-022-7.
  73. Peter Labouchere (2004) Using participatory story telling, forum theatre and NLP concepts and techniques to create powerful learning experiences around issues of HIV prevention, support and positive living paper presented at at EE4 - Fourth International Entertainment Education Conference
  74. Hunt, Stephen J. (2003) Alternative Religions: A Sociological Introduction ISBN 0-7546-3410-8
  75. David V. Barrett (2001) The New Believers: A Survey of Sects, Cults and Alternative Religions Available online from Google Books. pp.434,26

Further reading

Main article: Neuro-linguistic programming: Bibliography
  • Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1979) Frogs into Princes: Neuro Linguistic Programming. Real People Press. 149 pages. ISBN 0911226192
  • Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1975) The Structure of Magic I: A Book About Language and Therapy Science and Behavior Books. 198 pages. ISBN 0831400447
  • O'Connor, J., Seymour, J. Dilts, R. (foreword), Grinder, J. (preface) (1995) Introducing Neuro-linguistic Programming: The New Psychology of Personal Excellence Aquarian Press. 224 pages. ISBN 1852740736
  • Bandler, R., Grinder, J. (1981) Reframing: Neuro-Linguistic Programming and the Transformation of Meaning Real People Press. ISBN 0911226257
  • Grinder, J., Bandler, R. (1976) Patterns of the Hypnotic Techniques of Milton H. Erickson Volume 1 ISBN 091699001X
  • Dilts, R. (1990) Changing belief systems with NLP Meta Publications. ISBN 0916990249
  • Bandler, R., Andreas, S. (ed) and Andreas, C. (ed) (1985) Using Your Brain-for a Change ISBN 0911226273
  • Grinder, M. Lori Stephens (Ed) (1991) Righting the Educational Conveyor Belt ISBN 1555520367
  • Laborde, G. (1987) Influencing with Integrity: Management Skills for Communication and Negotiation
  • Dilts, R., Hallbom, T., Smith, S. (1990) Beliefs: Pathways to Health & Well-being
  • Satir, V., Grinder, J., Bandler, R. (1976) Changing with Families: A Book about Further Education for Being Human Science and Behavior Books. ISBN 083140051X

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