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Current Treatment Options in Neurology, 2004
Neurologists and ophthalmologists should be familiar with the causes and treatment of visual hallucinations so that they are able to reassure patients and minimize the anguish associated with untreated visual hallucinations. Hallucinations are under-reported by patients because of the perceived psychiatric implication or because of poor insight into ...
Victoria S., Pelak, Grant T., Liu
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Neurologists and ophthalmologists should be familiar with the causes and treatment of visual hallucinations so that they are able to reassure patients and minimize the anguish associated with untreated visual hallucinations. Hallucinations are under-reported by patients because of the perceived psychiatric implication or because of poor insight into ...
Victoria S., Pelak, Grant T., Liu
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Current Psychiatry Reports, 2006
Musical hallucinations have been described in numerous neurologic and psychiatric patients, but their pathophysiologic background is not understood. Analyzing the published cases, five subgroups can be separated according to their etiology: hypacusis, psychiatric disorders, focal brain lesions, epilepsy, and intoxication.
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Musical hallucinations have been described in numerous neurologic and psychiatric patients, but their pathophysiologic background is not understood. Analyzing the published cases, five subgroups can be separated according to their etiology: hypacusis, psychiatric disorders, focal brain lesions, epilepsy, and intoxication.
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Theory & Psychology, 2007
Top-down processes like heuristics and gap filling create consistency in normal perception. Sometimes top-down processes cause illusory perceptions. Top-down processes are also involved in the creation of hallucinations, experienced in phenomena like sensory deprivation and phantom limbs.
Elbers, N. +2 more
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Top-down processes like heuristics and gap filling create consistency in normal perception. Sometimes top-down processes cause illusory perceptions. Top-down processes are also involved in the creation of hallucinations, experienced in phenomena like sensory deprivation and phantom limbs.
Elbers, N. +2 more
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Journal of Neurology, 1991
Peduncular hallucinations usually present as visual disorders and are often genuine hallucinations associated with thalamic and/or mesencephalic lesions. In this case report we describe the clinical findings in a patient with hallucinations. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated bilateral ischaemic lesions in the thalamus and in the mesencephalon ...
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Peduncular hallucinations usually present as visual disorders and are often genuine hallucinations associated with thalamic and/or mesencephalic lesions. In this case report we describe the clinical findings in a patient with hallucinations. Magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated bilateral ischaemic lesions in the thalamus and in the mesencephalon ...
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British Journal of Psychiatry, 1987
Conversive hallucinations are rare in the psychiatric literature. The authors present a case which demonstrates the psychogenesis and phenomenology of conversive hallucinations in a young female patient.
P, Sirota, B, Spivac, B, Meshulam
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Conversive hallucinations are rare in the psychiatric literature. The authors present a case which demonstrates the psychogenesis and phenomenology of conversive hallucinations in a young female patient.
P, Sirota, B, Spivac, B, Meshulam
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2015
Auditory hallucinations constitute a phenomenologically rich group of endogenously mediated percepts which are associated with psychiatric, neurologic, otologic, and other medical conditions, but which are also experienced by 10-15% of all healthy individuals in the general population.
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Auditory hallucinations constitute a phenomenologically rich group of endogenously mediated percepts which are associated with psychiatric, neurologic, otologic, and other medical conditions, but which are also experienced by 10-15% of all healthy individuals in the general population.
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Hallucinating objects versus hallucinating subjects
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2005Collerton et al. propose that one and the same mechanism (PAD) underlies recurrent complex visual hallucinations (RCVH) in various disorders, including schizophrenia, dementia, and eye disease. The present commentary offers an alternative account of RCVH and other recurrent complex hallucinations specific to schizophrenia and related disorders only ...
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