Auditory hallucination

An auditory hallucination, or paracusia,[1] is a form of hallucination that involves perceiving sounds without auditory stimulus.

Auditory hallucination
Other namesParacusia
SpecialtyPsychiatry

A common form of auditory hallucination involves hearing one or more talking voices, and this is known as an auditory verbal hallucination.[2] This may be associated with psychotic disorders, most notably schizophrenia, and holds special significance in diagnosing these conditions.[3] However, individuals without any psychiatric disease whatsoever may hear voices.[4]

There are three main categories into which the hearing of talking voices often fall: a person hearing a voice speak one's thoughts, a person hearing one or more voices arguing, or a person hearing a voice narrating their own actions.[5] These three categories do not account for all types of auditory hallucinations.

Hallucinations of music also occur. In these, people more often hear snippets of songs that they know, or the music they hear may be original, and may occur in normal people and with no known cause.[6] Other types of auditory hallucination include exploding head syndrome and musical ear syndrome. In the latter, people will hear music playing in their mind, usually songs they are familiar with. This can be caused by: lesions on the brain stem (often resulting from a stroke); also, sleep disorders such as narcolepsy, tumors, encephalitis, or abscesses.[7] This should be distinguished from the commonly experienced phenomenon of getting a song stuck in one's head. Reports have also mentioned that it is also possible to get musical hallucinations from listening to music for long periods of time.[8] Other reasons include hearing loss and epileptic activity.[9]

In the past, the cause of auditory hallucinations was attributed to cognitive suppression by way of executive function failure of the fronto-parietal sulcus. Newer research has found that they coincide with the left superior temporal gyrus, suggesting that they are better attributed to speech misrepresentations.[10] It is assumed through research that the neural pathways involved in normal speech perception and production, which are lateralized to the left temporal lobe, also underlie auditory hallucinations.[10] Auditory hallucinations correspond with spontaneous neural activity of the left temporal lobe, and the subsequent primary auditory cortex. The perception of auditory hallucinations corresponds to the experience of actual external hearing, despite the absence of physical acoustic output.[11]

Causes

In 2015 a small survey[12] reported voice hearing in persons with a wide variety of DSM-5 diagnoses, including:

However, numerous persons surveyed reported no diagnosis. In his popular 2012 book Hallucinations, neurologist Oliver Sacks describes voice hearing in patients with a wide variety of medical conditions, as well as his own personal experience of hearing voices.

Schizophrenia

In people with a psychosis, the premier cause of auditory hallucinations is schizophrenia, and these are known as auditory verbal hallucinations (AVHs).[2] In schizophrenia, people show a consistent increase in activity of the thalamic and striatal subcortical nuclei, hypothalamus, and paralimbic regions; confirmed by PET and fMRI scans.[14][15] Other research shows an enlargement of temporal white matter, frontal gray matter, and temporal gray matter volumes (those areas crucial to both inner and outer speech) when compared to control groups.[16][17] This implies that functional and structural abnormalities in the brain, both of which may have a genetic component, can induce auditory hallucinations.[18]

Auditory verbal hallucinations attributed to an external source, rather than internal, are considered the defining factor for the diagnoses of schizophrenia. The voices heard are generally destructive and emotive, adding to the state of artificial reality and disorientation seen in psychotic patients.[10] The causal basis of hallucinations has been explored on the cellular receptor level. The glutamate hypothesis, proposed as possible cause for schizophrenia, may also have implications in auditory hallucinations, which are suspected to be triggered by altered glutamatergic transmission.[19]

Studies using dichotic listening methods suggest that people with schizophrenia have major deficits in the functioning of the left temporal lobe by showing that patients do not generally exhibit what is a functionally normal right ear advantage.[20] Inhibitory control of hallucinations in patients have been shown to involve failure of top-down regulation of resting-state networks and up-regulation of effort networks, further impeding normal cognitive functioning.[21]

Not all who experience hallucinations find them to be distressing.[22] The relationship between an individual and their hallucinations are personal, and everyone interacts with their troubles in different ways. There are those who hear solely malevolent voices, solely benevolent voices, those that hear a mix of the two, and those that see them as either malevolent or benevolent and not believing the voice.[22] Many patients also believe that the voices they hear are omnipotent and know all about what is going on in their lives and would be the best to tell them what to do.

Mood disorders and dementias

Mood disorders have also been known to correlate with auditory hallucinations, but tend to be milder than their psychosis induced counterpart. Auditory hallucinations are a relatively common sequelae of major neurocognitive disorders (formerly dementia) such as Alzheimer's disease.[23]

Transient causes

Auditory hallucinations have been known to manifest as a result of intense stress, sleep deprivation, drug use, and errors in development of proper psychological processes.[24] Genetic correlation has been identified with auditory hallucinations,[25] but most work with non-psychotic causes of auditory hallucinations is still ongoing.[24][26]

High caffeine consumption has been linked to an increase in the likelihood of experiencing auditory hallucinations. A study conducted by the La Trobe University School of Psychological Sciences revealed that as few as five cups of coffee a day could trigger the phenomenon.[27]

Pathophysiology

The following areas of the brain have been found to be active during auditory hallucinations through the use of fMRIs.

Treatments

Medication

The primary means of treating auditory hallucinations is antipsychotic medications which affect dopamine metabolism. If the primary diagnosis is a mood disorder (with psychotic features), adjunctive medications are often used (e.g., antidepressants or mood stabilizers). These medical approaches may allow the person to function normally but are not a cure as they do not eradicate the underlying thought disorder.[29]

Therapy

Cognitive behavioral therapy has been shown to help decrease the frequency and distressfulness of auditory hallucinations, particularly when other psychotic symptoms were presenting.[30] Enhanced supportive therapy has been shown to reduce the frequency of auditory hallucinations, the violent resistance the patient displayed towards said hallucinations, and an overall decrease in the perceived malignancy of the hallucinations.[30] Other cognitive and behavioral therapies have been used with mixed success.[31][32]

Another key to therapy is to help patients see that they do not need to obey voices that they are hearing. It has been seen in patients with schizophrenia and auditory hallucinations that with therapy they might be capable of recognizing and choosing to not obey the voices that they hear.[22]

Others

Between 25% and 30% of schizophrenia patients do not respond to antipsychotic medication[33] which has led researchers to look for alternate sources to help them. Two common methods to help are Electroconvulsive therapy and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS).[34] Electroconvulsive therapy or ECT has been shown to reduce psychotic symptoms associated with schizophrenia,[35] mania, and depression, and is often used in psychiatric hospitals.

Transcranial magnetic stimulation when used to treat auditory hallucinations in schizophrenic patients is done at a low frequency of 1 Hertz to the left temporoparietal cortex.[36]

History

Ancient history

Presentation

In the ancient world, auditory hallucinations were often viewed as either a gift or curse by God, or the gods (depending on the specific culture). According to the Greek historian Plutarch, during the reign of Tiberius (A.D. 14–37), a sailor named Thamus heard a voice cry out to him from across the water, "Thamus, are you there? When you reach Palodes, take care to proclaim that the great god Pan is dead."[37][38] The oracles of ancient Greece were known to experience auditory hallucinations while breathing in certain neurologically active vapors (such as the smoke from bay leaves), while the more pervasive delusions and symptomology were often viewed as possession by demonic forces as punishment for misdeeds.[38]

Treatments

Treatment in the ancient world is ill documented, but there are some cases of therapeutics being used to attempt treatment, while the common treatment was sacrifice and prayer in an attempt to placate the gods. During the Middle Ages, those with auditory hallucinations were sometimes subjected to trepanning or trial as a witch.[38] In other cases of extreme symptomatology, individuals were seen as being reduced to animals by a curse; these individuals were either left on the streets or imprisoned in insane asylums. It was the latter response that eventually led to modern psychiatric hospitals.[39]

Pre-modern

Presentation

Auditory hallucinations were rethought during the enlightenment. As a result, the predominant theory in the western world beginning in the late 18th century was that auditory hallucinations were the result of a disease in the brain (e.g. mania), and treated as such.[39]

Treatments

There were no effective treatments for hallucinations at this time. Conventional thought was that clean food, water, and air would allow the body to heal itself (sanatorium). Beginning in the 16th century insane asylums were first introduced in order to remove “the mad dogs” from the streets.[39] These asylums acted as prisons until the late 18th century. This is when doctors began the attempt to treat patients. Often attending doctors would douse patients in cold water, starve them, or spin patients on a wheel. Soon, this gave way to brain specific treatments with the most famous examples including lobotomy, shock therapy and branding the skull with hot iron.[39]

Society and culture

Notable cases

Robert Schumann, a famous music composer, spent the end of his life experiencing auditory hallucinations. Schumann's diaries state that he suffered perpetually from imagining that he had the note A5 sounding in his ears. The musical hallucinations became increasingly complex. One night he claimed to have been visited by the ghost of Schubert and wrote down the music that he was hearing. Thereafter, he began making claims that he could hear an angelic choir singing to him. As his condition worsened, the angelic voices developed into demonic ones.[38]

Brian Wilson, songwriter and co-founder of the Beach Boys, has schizoaffective disorder that presents itself in the form of disembodied voices.[40] They formed a major component of Bill Pohlad's Love & Mercy (2014), a biographical film which depicts Wilson's hallucinations as a source of musical inspiration,[41] constructing songs that were partly designed to converse with them.[42] Wilson has said of the voices: "Mostly [they're] derogatory. Some of it's cheerful. Most of it isn't."[43] To combat them, his psychiatrist advised that he "talk humorously to them", which he says has helped "a little bit".[40]

The onset of delusional thinking is most often described as being gradual and insidious. Patients have described an interest in psychic phenomena progressing to increasingly unusual preoccupations and then to bizarre beliefs "in which I believed wholeheartedly". One author wrote of their hallucinations: "they deceive, derange and force me into a world of crippling paranoia". In many cases, the delusional beliefs could be seen as fairly rational explanations for abnormal experiences: "I increasingly heard voices (which I'd always call ‘loud thoughts’)... I concluded that other people were putting these loud thoughts into my head".[44] Some cases have been described as an "auditory ransom note".

Cultural effects

According to research on hallucinations, both with participants from the general population and people diagnosed with schizophrenia, psychosis and related mental illnesses, there is a relationship between culture and hallucinations.[45][46][47] In relation to hallucinations, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) states that “transient hallucinatory experiences may occur without a mental disorder”, put differently, short or temporary hallucinations are not exclusive to being diagnosed with a mental disorder.[48]

In a study of 1,080 people with a schizophrenia diagnosis from seven different countries of origin, including Austria, Poland, Lithuania, Georgia, Pakistan, Nigeria and Ghana, researchers found that 74.8% of the total participants (n = 1,080) disclosed having experienced more auditory hallucinations in the last year than any other hallucinations from the date of the interview.[45] Further, the study found the highest rates of both auditory hallucinations and visual hallucinations in both of the West African countries, Ghana and Nigeria.[45] In the Ghana sample, n = 76, auditory hallucinations were reported by 90.8% and visual hallucinations were reported by 53.9% of participants.[45] In the Nigeria sample, n = 324, auditory hallucinations were reported by 85.4% and visual hallucinations were reported by 50.8% of participants.[45] These findings are in line with other studies that have found that visual hallucinations were reported more in traditional cultures.

A 2015 published study, “Hearing Voices in Different Cultures: A Social Kindling Hypothesis” compared the experiences of three groups of 20 participants who met criteria for schizophrenia (n = 60) from three different places, including San Mateo, CA (USA), Accra, Ghana (Africa), and Chennai, India (South Asia).[47] In this study, researchers found distinct differences among the participant's experience with voices. In the San Mateo, CA sample all but three of the participants referred to their experience of hearing voices with “diagnostic labels, and even [used] diagnostic criteria readily”, they also and connected “hearing voices” with being “crazy”.[47] For the Accra, Ghana sample, almost no participants referenced a diagnosis and instead they spoke about voices as having “a spiritual meaning and as well as a psychiatric one”.[47] In the Chennai, India sample, similarly to the Ghana interviewees, most of the participants did not reference a diagnosis and for many of these participants, the voices they heard were of people they knew and people they were related to, “voices of kin”.[47] Another key finding that was identified in this research study is that “voice-hearing experience outside the West may be less harsh”.[47] Finally, researchers found that “different cultural expectations about the mind, or about the way people expect thoughts and feelings to be private or accessible to spirits or persons” could be attributed to the differences they found across the participants.

In a qualitative study of 57 self-identified Māori participants subcategorized within one or more of the following groups including: “tangata Māori (people seeking wellness/service users), Kaumatua/Kuia (elders), Kai mahi (cultural support workers), Managers of mental health services, clinicians (psychiatrists, nurses and psychologists) and students (undergraduate and postgraduate psychology students)”, researchers interviewed participants and asked them about “[1] their understanding of experiences that could be considered to be psychotic or labelled schizophrenic, [2] what questions they would ask someone who came seeking help and [3] they we asked about their understanding of the terms schizophrenia and psychosis”.[49] The participants were also people who either had worked with psychosis or schizophrenia or had experienced psychosis or schizophrenia.[49] In this study, researchers found that the participants understood these experiences labeled “psychotic” or “schizophrenic” through multiple models.[49] Taken directly from the article, the researchers wrote that there is “no one Māori way of understanding psychotic experiences”.[49] Instead, as part of understanding these experiences, the participants combined both “biological explanations and Māori spiritual beliefs”, with a preference for cultural and psychosocial explanations.[49] For example, 19 participants spoke about psychotic experiences as sometimes being a sign of matakite (giftedness). One of the Kaumatua/Kuia (elders) was quoted as saying:

I never wanted to accept it, I said no it isn’t, it isn’t [matakite] but it wouldn’t stop and in truth I knew what I had to do, help my people, I didn’t want the responsibility but here I am. They helped me understand it and told me what to do with it.”

An important finding highlighted in this study is that studies done by the World Health Organization (WHO) have found that “developing countries (non-Western) experience far higher rates of recovery from ‘schizophrenia’ than Western countries”.[49] The researchers further articulate that these findings may be due to culturally specific meaning created about the experience of schizophrenia, psychosis and hearing voices as well as “positive expectations around recovery”.

Research has found that auditory hallucinations and hallucinations more broadly are not necessarily a symptom of “severe mental health” and instead might be more common place than assumed and also experienced by people in the general population.[46] According to a literature review, “The prevalence of voice-hearers in the general population: A literature review”, which compared 17 studies on auditory hallucinations in participants from nine countries, found that “differences in the prevalence of [voice-hearing in the adult general population] can be attributed to true variations based on gender, ethnicity and environmental context”.[46] The studies took place from 1894 to 2007 and the nine countries where the studies took place in are the United Kingdom, Philippines, United States, Sweden, France, Germany, Italy, Netherlands, and New Zealand. The same literature review highlights that “studies that [analyzed] their data by gender report[ed] a higher frequency of women reporting hallucinatory experiences of some kind”.[46] Although generally speaking hallucinations (including auditory) are strongly related to psychotic diagnoses and schizophrenia, the presence of hallucinations does not exclusively mean that someone is suffering from a psychotic or schizophrenic episode or diagnosis.[46]

Research

A good amount of the research done has focused primarily on patients with schizophrenia, and beyond that drug resistant auditory hallucinations.[22][50]

Auditory verbal hallucinations as symptoms of disordered speech

There is now substantial evidence that auditory verbal hallucinations (AVHs) in psychotic patients are manifestations of disorganized speech capacity at least as much as, and even more than, being genuinely auditory phenomena. Such evidence comes mainly from research carried out on the neuroimaging of AVHs, on the so-called “inner” and “subvocal” speech, on “voices” experienced by deaf patients, and on the phenomenology of AVHs [51]. Interestingly, this evidence is in line with clinical insights of the classical psychiatric school (de Clérambault) [52] as well as of (Lacanian) psychoanalysis. According to the latter, the experience of the voice is linked more to speech as a chain of articulated signifying elements than to sensorium itself [53].

Non-psychotic symptomatology

There is on-going research that supports the prevalence of auditory hallucinations, with a lack of other conventional psychotic symptoms (such as delusions, or paranoia), particularly in pre-pubertal children.[54] These studies indicate a remarkably high percentage of children (up to 14% of the population sampled[55]) experienced sounds or voices without any external cause, although "sounds" are not considered by psychiatrists to be examples of auditory hallucinations. Differentiating actual auditory hallucinations from "sounds" or a normal internal dialogue is important since the latter phenomena are not indicative of mental illness.

Methods

To explore the auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia, experimental neurocognitive use approaches such as dichotic listening, structural fMRI, and functional fMRI. Together, they allow insight into how the brain reacts to auditory stimulus, be it external or internal. Such methods allowed researchers to find a correlation between decreased gray matter of the left temporal lobe and difficulties in processing external sound stimulus in hallucinating patients.[10]

Functional neuroimaging has shown increased blood and oxygen flow to speech related areas of the left temporal lobe, including Broca's area and the thalamus.[10]

Causes

The causes of auditory hallucinations are unclear.

It is suspected that deficits in the left temporal lobe attribute that lead to spontaneous neural activity cause speech misrepresentations that account for auditory hallucinations.[10]

Charles Fernyhough, of the University of Durham poses one theory among many but stands as a reasonable example of the literature. Given standing evidence towards involvement of the inner voice in auditory hallucinations,[56] he proposes two alternative hypotheses on the origins of auditory hallucinations in the non-psychotic. They both rely on an understanding of the internalization process of the inner voice.[24][55][57]

Internalization of the inner voice

The internalization process of the inner voice is the process of creating an inner voice during early childhood, and can be separated into four distinct levels.[24][55][57]

Level one (external dialogue) involves the capacity to maintain an external dialogue with another person, i.e. a toddler talking with their parent(s).

Level two (private speech) involves the capacity to maintain a private external dialogue, as seen in children voicing the actions of play using dolls or other toys, or someone talking to themselves while repeating something they had written down.

Level three (expanded inner speech) is the first internal level in speech. This involves the capacity to carry out internal monologues, as seen in reading to oneself, or going over a list silently.

Level four (condensed inner speech) is the final level in the internalization process. It involves the capacity to think in terms of pure meaning without the need to put thoughts into words in order to grasp the meaning of the thought.

Disruption to internalization

A disruption could occur during the normal process of internalizing one's inner voice, where the individual would not interpret their own voice as belonging to them; a problem that would be interpreted as level one to level four error.[24][55][57]

Re-expansion

Alternatively, the disruption could occur during the process of re-externalizing one's inner voice, resulting in an apparent second voice that seems alien to the individual; a problem that would be interpreted as a level four to level one error.[24][55][57]

Treatments

Psychopharmacological treatments include anti-psychotic medications. Psychology research shows that the first step in treatment is for the patient to realize that the voices they hear are creation of their own mind. This realization allows patients to reclaim a measure of control over their lives. Some additional psychological interventions might allow for the process of controlling these phenomena of auditory hallucinations but more research is needed.[24]

See also

References

  1. "Paracusia". Medical dictionary.
  2. Nathou, C; Etard, O; Dollfus, S (2019). "Auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia: current perspectives in brain stimulation treatments". Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment. 15: 2105–2117. doi:10.2147/NDT.S168801. PMC 6662171. PMID 31413576.
  3. Yuhas D. "Throughout History, Defining Schizophrenia Has Remained A challenge". Scientific American Mind (March 2013). Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  4. Thompson A (September 15, 2006). "Hearing Voices: Some People Like It". LiveScience.com. Archived from the original on 2 November 2006. Retrieved 2014-02-01.
  5. Semple, David. "Oxford hand book of psychiatry" Oxford press, 2005
  6. Deutsch, D. (2019). "Hallucinations of music and speech". Musical Illusions and Phantom Words: How Music and Speech Unlock Mysteries of the Brain. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780190206833. LCCN 2018051786.
  7. "Rare Hallucinations Make Music In The Mind". ScienceDaily.com. August 9, 2000. Archived from the original on 5 December 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-31.
  8. Young K (July 27, 2005). "IPod hallucinations face acid test". Vnunet.com. Archived from the original on 2007-12-20. Retrieved 2008-04-10.
  9. Engmann B, Reuter M (April 2009). "Spontaneous perception of melodies – hallucination or epilepsy?". Nervenheilkunde. 28: 217–221. ISSN 0722-1541.
  10. Hugdahl K, Løberg EM, Nygård M (May 2009). "Left temporal lobe structural and functional abnormality underlying auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia". Frontiers in Neuroscience. 3 (1): 34–45. doi:10.3389/neuro.01.001.2009. PMC 2695389. PMID 19753095.
  11. Ikuta T, DeRosse P, Argyelan M, Karlsgodt KH, Kingsley PB, Szeszko PR, Malhotra AK (December 2015). "Subcortical modulation in auditory processing and auditory hallucinations". Behavioural Brain Research. 295: 78–81. doi:10.1016/j.bbr.2015.08.009. PMC 4641005. PMID 26275927.
  12. Woods A, Jones N, Alderson-Day B, Callard F, Fernyhough C (April 2015). "Experiences of hearing voices: analysis of a novel phenomenological survey". The Lancet. Psychiatry. 2 (4): 323–31. doi:10.1016/S2215-0366(15)00006-1. PMC 4580735. PMID 26360085.
  13. "Schizophrenia". National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). Retrieved November 20, 2019.
  14. Silbersweig DA, Stern E, Frith C, Cahill C, Holmes A, Grootoonk S, Seaward J, McKenna P, Chua SE, Schnorr L (November 1995). "A functional neuroanatomy of hallucinations in schizophrenia". Nature. 378 (6553): 176–9. Bibcode:1995Natur.378..176S. doi:10.1038/378176a0. PMID 7477318.
  15. Gaser C, Nenadic I, Volz HP, Büchel C, Sauer H (January 2004). "Neuroanatomy of "hearing voices": a frontotemporal brain structural abnormality associated with auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia". Cerebral Cortex. 14 (1): 91–6. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhg107. PMID 14654460.
  16. Shin SE, Lee JS, Kang MH, Kim CE, Bae JN, Jung G (January 2005). "Segmented volumes of cerebrum and cerebellum in first episode schizophrenia with auditory hallucinations". Psychiatry Research. 138 (1): 33–42. doi:10.1016/j.pscychresns.2004.11.005. PMID 15708299.
  17. Shergill SS, Brammer MJ, Fukuda R, Williams SC, Murray RM, McGuire PK (June 2003). "Engagement of brain areas implicated in processing inner speech in people with auditory hallucinations". The British Journal of Psychiatry. 182 (6): 525–31. doi:10.1192/bjp.182.6.525. PMID 12777344.
  18. Boksa P (July 2009). "On the neurobiology of hallucinations". Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience. 34 (4): 260–2. PMC 2702442. PMID 19568476.
  19. Bartha R, al-Semaan YM, Williamson PC, Drost DJ, Malla AK, Carr TJ, Densmore M, Canaran G, Neufeld RW (June 1999). "A short echo proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy study of the left mesial-temporal lobe in first-onset schizophrenic patients". Biological Psychiatry. 45 (11): 1403–11. doi:10.1016/S0006-3223(99)00007-4. PMID 10356621.
  20. Green MF, Hugdahl K, Mitchell S (March 1994). "Dichotic listening during auditory hallucinations in patients with schizophrenia". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 151 (3): 357–62. doi:10.1176/ajp.151.3.357. PMID 8109643.
  21. Fox MD, Raichle ME (September 2007). "Spontaneous fluctuations in brain activity observed with functional magnetic resonance imaging". Nature Reviews. Neuroscience. 8 (9): 700–11. doi:10.1038/nrn2201. PMID 17704812.
  22. Chadwick, Paul; Birchwood, Max (February 1994). "The Omnipotence of Voices: A Cognitive Approach to Auditory Hallucinations". The British Journal of Psychiatry. 164 (2): 190–201. doi:10.1192/bjp.164.2.190. ISSN 0007-1250. PMID 8173822.
  23. Wilson RS, Gilley DW, Bennett DA, Beckett LA, Evans DA (August 2000). "Hallucinations, delusions, and cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease". Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry. 69 (2): 172–7. doi:10.1136/jnnp.69.2.172. PMC 1737043. PMID 10896689.
  24. Fernyhough C, Jones SR (August 2013). "Thinking aloud about mental voices" (PDF). In Macpherson F, Platchias D (eds.). Hallucination. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-01920-0.
  25. Hugdahl K, Løberg EM, Specht K, Steen VM, van Wageningen H, Jørgensen HA (2008). "Auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia: the role of cognitive, brain structural and genetic disturbances in the left temporal lobe". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 1: 6. doi:10.3389/neuro.09.006.2007. PMC 2525988. PMID 18958220.
  26. Stip E, Letourneau G (March 2009). "Psychotic symptoms as a continuum between normality and pathology". Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 54 (3): 140–51. doi:10.1177/070674370905400302. PMID 19321018.
  27. "Too Much Coffee Can Make You Hear Things That Are Not There". Retrieved 2 July 2016.
  28. Dierks, Thomas; Linden, David E. J; Jandl, Martin; Formisano, Elia; Goebel, Rainer; Lanfermann, Heinrich; Singer, Wolf (1999-03-01). "Activation of Heschl's Gyrus during Auditory Hallucinations". Neuron. 22 (3): 615–621. doi:10.1016/S0896-6273(00)80715-1. ISSN 0896-6273. PMID 10197540.
  29. Barker P (2009). Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing - The craft of caring (2nd ed.). England: Hodder Arnold. ISBN 978-1-4987-5958-8.
  30. Penn DL, Meyer PS, Evans E, Wirth RJ, Cai K, Burchinal M (April 2009). "A randomized controlled trial of group cognitive-behavioral therapy vs. enhanced supportive therapy for auditory hallucinations". Schizophrenia Research. 109 (1–3): 52–9. doi:10.1016/j.schres.2008.12.009. PMID 19176275.
  31. Hayashi N, Igarashi Y, Suda K, Nakagawa S (December 2007). "Auditory hallucination coping techniques and their relationship to psychotic symptomatology". Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. 61 (6): 640–5. doi:10.1111/j.1440-1819.2007.01741.x. PMID 18081625.
  32. Shergill SS, Murray RM, McGuire PK (August 1998). "Auditory hallucinations: a review of psychological treatments". Schizophrenia Research. 32 (3): 137–50. doi:10.1016/S0920-9964(98)00052-8. PMID 9720119.
  33. Rosenberg, Oded; Roth, Yiftach; Kotler, Moshe; Zangen, Abraham; Dannon, Pinhas (2011-02-09). "Deep transcranial magnetic stimulation for the treatment of auditory hallucinations: a preliminary open-label study". Annals of General Psychiatry. 10 (1): 3. doi:10.1186/1744-859X-10-3. ISSN 1744-859X. PMC 3045391. PMID 21303566.
  34. Matheson, S. L.; Green, M. J.; Loo, C.; Carr, V. J. (2010-05-01). "Quality assessment and comparison of evidence for electroconvulsive therapy and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation for schizophrenia: A systematic meta-review". Schizophrenia Research. 118 (1): 201–210. doi:10.1016/j.schres.2010.01.002. ISSN 0920-9964. PMID 20117918.
  35. Pompili, M., Lester, D., Dominici, G., Longo, L., Marconi, G., Forte, A., ... & Girardi, P. (2013). Indications for electroconvulsive treatment in schizophrenia: a systematic review. Schizophrenia research, 146(1-3), 1-9.
  36. Tranulis, Constantin; Sepehry, Amir Ali; Galinowski, André; Stip, Emmanuel (September 2008). "Should We Treat Auditory Hallucinations with Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation? A Metaanalysis". The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. 53 (9): 577–586. doi:10.1177/070674370805300904. ISSN 0706-7437. PMID 18801220.
  37. Plutarch, Moralia Book 5:17, De defectu oraculorum ("The Obsolescence of Oracles").
  38. Laqueur T (2007-09-03). "Spirited Away". pp. 36–42.
  39. Boyer, Paul S. (2001). "Mental Health Institutions (Insane Asylums)". The Oxford companion to United States history. Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press. p. 488. ISBN 978-0-19-508209-8.
  40. "Brian Wilson – A Powerful Interview". Ability Magazine. Ability Magazine.
  41. Tapley K (May 21, 2015). "Bill Pohlad wants 'Love & Mercy' to take you inside the genius of Beach Boy Brian Wilson". HitFix.
  42. Powers A (July 7, 2015). "Why Films About Musicians Leave So Much Music Off Screen". NPR.
  43. Gilstrap P (June 3, 2015). "Inside Brian Wilson's room: The famed Beach Boy opens up about mental illness, medication, manipulation and the movie about his life". Salon.
  44. Stanton B (2000). "First-person accounts of delusions". Psychiatric Bulletin. 20 (9): 333–336. doi:10.1192/pb.24.9.333.
  45. Bauer, Susanne M.; Schanda, Hans; Karakula, Hanna; Olajossy-Hilkesberger, Luiza; Rudaleviciene, Palmira; Okribelashvili, Nino; Chaudhry, Haroon R.; Idemudia, Sunday E.; Gscheider, Sharon; Ritter, Kristina; Stompe, Thomas (2011-05-01). "Culture and the prevalence of hallucinations in schizophrenia". Comprehensive Psychiatry. 52 (3): 319–325. doi:10.1016/j.comppsych.2010.06.008. ISSN 0010-440X. PMID 21497227.
  46. Beavan, Vanessa; Read, John; Cartwright, Claire (2011-05-16). "The prevalence of voice-hearers in the general population: A literature review". Journal of Mental Health. 20 (3): 281–292. doi:10.3109/09638237.2011.562262. ISSN 0963-8237. PMID 21574793. S2CID 207498701.
  47. Luhrmann, Tanya M.; Padmavati, R.; Tharoor, Hema; Osei, Akwasi (2015). "Hearing Voices in Different Cultures: A Social Kindling Hypothesis". Topics in Cognitive Science. 7 (4): 646–663. doi:10.1111/tops.12158. ISSN 1756-8765. PMID 26349837.
  48. American Psychiatric Association (2013-05-22). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. American Psychiatric Association. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.988.5627. doi:10.1176/appi.books.9780890425596. ISBN 978-0890425558.
  49. Taitimu, Melissa; Read, John; McIntosh, Tracey (2018-02-19). "Ngā Whakāwhitinga (standing at the crossroads): How Māori understand what Western psychiatry calls "schizophrenia"" (PDF). Transcultural Psychiatry. 55 (2): 153–177. doi:10.1177/1363461518757800. ISSN 1363-4615. PMID 29455628.
  50. Waters, Flavie; Woodward, Todd; Allen, Paul; Aleman, Andre; Sommer, Iris (2012-06-18). "Self-recognition Deficits in Schizophrenia Patients With Auditory Hallucinations: A Meta-analysis of the Literature". Schizophrenia Bulletin. 38 (4): 741–750. doi:10.1093/schbul/sbq144. ISSN 0586-7614. PMC 3406529. PMID 21147895.
  51. Mitropoulos, George B. Auditory Verbal Hallucinations in Psychosis: Abnormal Perceptions or Symptoms of Disordered Thought?. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 2020, 208.1: 81-84.
  52. de Clérambault G (1942) OEvre Psychiatrique. Tome II (pp 610–612). Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.
  53. Lacan J (2006) Écrits: The first complete edition in English. New York: Norton. p. 447.
  54. Askenazy FL, Lestideau K, Meynadier A, Dor E, Myquel M, Lecrubier Y (September 2007). "Auditory hallucinations in pre-pubertal children. A one-year follow-up, preliminary findings". European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. 16 (6): 411–5. doi:10.1007/s00787-006-0577-9. PMID 17468968.
  55. Jones SR, Fernyhough C (March 2007). "Neural correlates of inner speech and auditory verbal hallucinations: a critical review and theoretical integration". Clinical Psychology Review. 27 (2): 140–54. doi:10.1016/j.cpr.2006.10.001. PMID 17123676.
  56. Allen P, Aleman A, McGuire PK (August 2007). "Inner speech models of auditory verbal hallucinations: evidence from behavioural and neuroimaging studies". International Review of Psychiatry. 19 (4): 407–15. doi:10.1080/09540260701486498. PMID 17671873.
  57. Fernyhough C (2004). "Alien voices and inner dialogue: towards a developmental account of auditory verbal hallucinations". New Ideas in Psychology. 22: 49–68. doi:10.1016/j.newideapsych.2004.09.001.

Further reading

  • Johnson FH (1978). The anatomy of hallucinations. Chicago: Nelson-Hall Co. ISBN 978-0-88229-155-0.
  • Bentall RP, Slade PD (1988). Sensory deception: a scientific analysis of hallucination. London: Croom Helm. ISBN 978-0-7099-3961-0.
  • Larøi F, Aleman A (2008). Hallucinations: The Science of Idiosyncratic Perception. American Psychological Association (APA). ISBN 978-1-4338-0311-6. Archived from the original on 2008-12-21. Retrieved 2009-10-27.
Classification
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.