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Hallucinations are often associated with alterations in brain activation, particularly in language-related and sensory processing areas. Existing models suggest different frameworks for understanding the relationship between brain activation and hallucination proneness, yet practical evidence supporting these models remains limited. This study investigates the neural correlates of hallucination proneness in healthy individuals through functional MRI (fMRI) tasks focusing on both auditory and visual processing, including voice and text comprehension, face recognition, and audio-visual stimuli. Participants, primarily university students, completed Launay-Slade Hallucination Scale-Modified (LSHS-M) measures, including auditory (LSHS-A) and visual (LSHS-V) subscales, while undergoing fMRI scans. Correlations were examined between hallucination proneness scores and brain activation in task-relevant and task-irrelevant regions. Although no significant correlations were found between hallucination scores and activation in task-relevant areas, positive correlations emerged in language-related regions during visual tasks, suggesting increased engagement in task-irrelevant areas. These results point to an inhibition deficit in individuals with higher hallucination proneness, supporting theories of reduced cognitive control. Furthermore, lateralization indices showed no significant correlation with hallucination scores, challenging assumptions about the continuum hypothesis in non-clinical populations. Taken together, these findings highlight the complexity of the neural mechanisms underlying hallucination proneness. While the study provides partial support for inhibition-based theories, the largely null results highlight the need for sensitive tasks, robust statistical controls, and broader populations to fully elucidate the neurobiological basis of hallucination proneness.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainresbull.2025.111424 | DOI Listing |
Cortex
August 2025
Experimental Psychology, Division of Psychology and Language Sciences, University College London, London, UK; Institute of Ophthalmology, University College London, London, UK.
Visual hallucinations occur across many clinical conditions, but can also be induced experimentally in healthy individuals, using high-frequency flicker (Ganzflicker) and sensory deprivation (Ganzfeld). It is unclear how hallucinatory proneness changes across the lifespan, with prior questionnaire-based studies showing mixed results. As factors such as multi-sensory acuity loss and relatively increased reliance on prior knowledge may increase as we age, and these are considered risk factors for hallucination proneness, we hypothesised that reported decreases in hallucinations might reflect underreporting due to stigma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBJPsych Open
July 2025
Department of Psychology, University of Chieti-Pescara, Chieti, Italy.
Background: Auditory hallucinations (hearing voices in the absence of physical stimuli) are present in clinical conditions, but they are also experienced less frequently by healthy individuals. In the non-clinical population, auditory hallucinations are described more often as positive and not intrusive; indeed, they have received less attention.
Aims: The present study explores the phenomenology of non-clinical auditory hallucinations and their possible relationship with religiosity.
Biol Psychiatry
July 2025
Interacting Minds Centre, Aarhus University, Denmark.
Background: An imbalance in the weighting of prior beliefs and sensory evidence is thought to contribute to the development of psychotic symptoms, such as hallucinations and delusions. We investigated (1) how much individuals with schizotypal traits, a subclinical expression of psychosis-proneness, use high-level semantic priors and sensory evidence to understand noise-degraded language; (2) whether an imbalance would potentially result in task-based hallucinations - perceptions that match expectations but not the input; and finally (2) whether an potential imbalance was linked to altered levels of cortical glutamate.
Methods: In a language comprehension task, we simultaneously manipulated semantic predictability, sensory degradation and surprisal to estimate the prior weight using a Bayesian Belief updating model.
Psychiatry Res Neuroimaging
August 2025
Department of Neuroscience, Bilkent University Aysel Sabuncu Brain Research Center, Ankara, Türkiye; National Magnetic Resonance Research Center (UMRAM), Bilkent University, Ankara, Türkiye; Department of Psychology, Bilkent University, Ankara, Türkiye; 1st Department of Psychiatry, National and
Experiencing mild symptoms of psychosis, like delusions and hallucinations, occurs sometimes in general, nonclinical populations, often termed psychosis proneness (PP), potentially part of the psychosis continuum. Understanding the neural and environmental factors contributing to PP in young individuals during critical developmental periods remains unclear. We aimed to explore these directional relationships using causal discovery analysis (CDA).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Bull
September 2025
Department of Experimental Psychology, Liverpool University, Liverpool L69 7ZX, UK.
Hallucinations are often associated with alterations in brain activation, particularly in language-related and sensory processing areas. Existing models suggest different frameworks for understanding the relationship between brain activation and hallucination proneness, yet practical evidence supporting these models remains limited. This study investigates the neural correlates of hallucination proneness in healthy individuals through functional MRI (fMRI) tasks focusing on both auditory and visual processing, including voice and text comprehension, face recognition, and audio-visual stimuli.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF