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Scientists identify brain regions associated with auditory hallucinations in borderline personality disorder
Neuroimaging suggests that people with borderline personality disorder who hear voices show distinct structural differences ...
A technique that induces imaginary sounds in both mice and people could help scientists understand the brain circuits involved in schizophrenia and other disorders that cause hallucinations. The ...
Auditory hallucinations are likely the result of abnormalities in two brain processes: a 'broken' corollary discharge that fails to suppress self-generated sounds, and a 'noisy' efference copy that ...
The phenomenon that sound is heard despite the fact that the mind is abnormal and actually nothing is sounded is "Auditory hallucinationIt is called "schizophreniaIt is also cited as one of the ...
Auditory hallucinations, defined as the perception of sounds or voices without external stimuli, are a core symptom in many psychiatric disorders, particularly schizophrenia. Recent developments have ...
The cognitive neural mechanism of auditory hallucinations. Dissociative impairment of functional distinct signals in motor-to-sensory transformation process – a ‘broken’ monitoring signal plus a ...
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