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Auditory Hallucinations - Articles
auditory hallucinations
by
Jennifer aka Beautiful MInd


Posted
Mon 25 Aug 2008 6:58pm
Thanks, Octave Ocean for your response to the last post.
So, I think I will try to explain here what auditory hallucinations are like. My reason for doing this right...".
Generally what I hear that is an "auditory hallucination" is rhyming with something the person really is saying. Sometimes I also hear people who aren't there saying things, or hear
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Whoa…Auditory Hallucination Time
by
patientanonymous

Posted
Sat 28 Jun 2008 12:00am
I don’t hallucinate.
Have I ever? *PA thinks*
Except from some DP/DR (whichever you wish to phrase), and other symptoms as per my Simple Partial Seizures, they are definitely of a psychic phenomena but I have never hallucinated.
So, to the voices. It is hard to explain as I am sure it is for others as well. Or maybe it is not hard for them
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hallucinations have returned
by
Jennifer aka Beautiful MInd


Posted
Sun 07 Sep 2008 8:00pm
. But at the moment, this does not seem to be very successful.
I've been hallucinating again. At first, it was just very minor instances of auditory hallucinations. There is a big difference, for me, between severe auditory hallucinations, where I am hearing people say things to me that they are not really saying, or hearing people on TV or the radio talking to me
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hallucinations
by
Jennifer aka Beautiful MInd


Posted
Mon 25 Aug 2008 6:58pm
as a clarification though, please understand that what I have are auditory hallucinations (for which I could write a better description sometime), and delusional thoughts, but not visual hallucinations. I found writing about the visual far more simple to explain, so here is a simplified explanation. I apologize if this sounds redundant, since, if you've read much
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hallucinations
by
heroteo heroteo
Posted
Fri 04 Jun 2010 6:17am
The cause of hallucinations are many.
Most of the time hallucinations are caused by functional deficits in the brain.
We have neurotransmitters in the brain. A very... to reduce psychosis and hallucinations.
Too much dopamine speeds up nerve impulses which in turn can contribute to psychosis and hallucinations.
Schizophrenia is an example
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Hallucination
by
Luchies
Posted
Wed 15 Dec 2010 8:44am
Hello everyone...pls i want to know if hallucination is common with sickle cell...
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Book Quote - Defining Hallucinations
by
Jeremiah D.
Posted
Tue 31 Aug 2010 12:00am
"In more contemporary accounts of hallucination, it has been difficult to find an unambiguous definition. Nonetheless, it is important to agree on a suitable working definition that will guide theory and research, and in describing efforts at reaching such a definition, we will be able to demarcate hallucinations from other phenomena
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