Scholarly Book Chapters
- Barnier, A.J., & McConkey, K.M. (1995). An experiential analysis of conflict resolution in hypnosis. In G.D. Burrows & R.O. Stanley (Eds.), Contemporary international hypnosis (pp. 89-96). London, UK: Wiley Publications.
- McConkey, K.M., Barnier, A.J., & Sheehan, P.W. (1998). Hypnosis and pseudomemory: Understanding the findings and their implications. In S.J. Lynn & K.M. McConkey (Eds.), Truth in memory (pp. 227-259). New York, NY: Guilford Press.
- Barnier, A.J., & Lack, L. (2001). Consciousness, hypnosis, and sleep. In N.W. Bond & K.M. McConkey (Eds.), Psychological science: An introduction (pp. 3.100-3.135). Roseville, NSW: McGraw-Hill.
- McConkey, K.M., Sheehan, P.W., & Barnier, A.J. (2003). Hypnotically influenced memory in the legal system. In I. Freckleton & H. Selby (Eds.), Expert evidence (pp. 6-2501-6-2631). North Ryde, NSW: Law Book Company Ltd.
- Barnier, A.J., & McConkey, K.M. (2004). Defining and identifying the highly hypnotisable person. In M. Heap, R. Brown, & D. Oakley (Eds.), The highly hypnotisable person: Theoretical, experimental and clinical issues (pp. 30-60). London, UK: Brunner-Routledge.
- McConkey, K.M., & Barnier, A.J. (2004). The highly hypnotisable person: Unity and diversity in behaviour and experience. In M. Heap, R. Brown, & D. Oakley (Eds.), The highly hypnotisable person: Theoretical, experimental and clinical issues (pp. 61-84). London, UK: Brunner-Routledge.
- Barnier, A.J., Dienes, Z., & Mitchell, C.A. (2008). How hypnosis happens: New cognitive theories of hypnotic responding. In M.R. Nash & A.J. Barnier (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of hypnosis: Theory, research and practice (pp. 141-177). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
- Barnier, A.J., & Nash, M.R. (Eds.) (2008). Introduction: A roadmap for explanation, a working definition. In M.R. Nash & A.J. Barnier (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of hypnosis: Theory, research and practice (pp. 1-18). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
- Woody, E.Z., & Barnier, A.J. (2008). Hypnosis scales for the twenty first century: What do we need and how should we use them? In M.R. Nash & A.J. Barnier (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of hypnosis: Theory, research and practice (pp. 255-281). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
- Barnier, A.J., & Oakley, D.A. (2009). Hypnosis and suggestion. In W.P. Banks (Ed.), Encyclopedia of consciousness (pp. 351-368). New York, NY: Elsevier.
- Barnier, A.J., & Council, J.R. (2010). Hypnotizability matters: The what, why, and how of measurement. In S.J. Lynn, J.W. Rhue, & I. Kirsch (Eds.), Handbook of clinical hypnosis (2nd ed., pp. 47-77). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
- Barnier, A.J., McConkey, K.M., & Sheehan, P.W. (2010). Hypnotically influenced memory in the legal system. In I. Freckleton & H. Selby (Eds.), Expert evidence (Rev. ed., pp. 6-2501-6-2631). North Ryde, NSW: Law Book Company Ltd.
- Cox, R.E., & Barnier, A.J. (2010). Hypnotic illusions and clinical delusions: Hypnosis as a research method. In R. Langdon & M. Turner (Eds.), Delusion and confabulation: Overlapping or distinct psychopathologies of reality distortion (Macquarie Monographs in Cognitive Science, pp. 202-232). New York, NY: Psychology Press.
- Harris, C., Sutton, J., & Barnier, A.J. (2010). Autobiographical forgetting, social forgetting, and situated forgetting: Forgetting in context. In S. Della Sala (Ed.), Forgetting (Current Issues in Memory Series, pp. 253-284). London, UK: Psychology Press & Routledge.
- Sutton, J., Harris, C.B., & Barnier, A.J. (2010). Memory and cognition. In S. Radstone & B. Schwarz (Eds.), Memory: Histories, theories, debates (pp. 209-226, pp. 488-493). New York, NY: Fordham University Press.