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We had a couple of people there going hunting, and one of them mistook a person for a deer, so he was killed with one shot, and I guess this is called a hallucination!!
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You say it's an illusion?
Still need to affirm his existence?
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Hallucinations are non-realistic perceptual experiences that can involve sight, hearing, smell, and even touch, and although the things in the hallucinations do not actually happen, the experience itself can often be so convincing that some people give it supernatural meanings, such as apocalypse, psychic, etc. Illusions are real perceptions, and hallucinations are not triggered by our external environment, but rather a series of real perceptions.
In 1998, at King's College London, the brains of several hallucinators were scanned by researchers. Researchers have found that when hallucinations occur, the brain is active in the same part as when they experience a similar reality. For example, when they see another person's face in a hallucination, the fusiform gyrus in the brain is activated, and this part of the brain is generally only active when people see a real face in reality.
The same is true for seeing colors or words in the brain in hallucinations.
So, when people hallucinate, they do have a real experience. When we dream, many times we know it's a dream, but hallucinations often make you feel like it's reality.
Hallucinations arise from the loss of senses.
It is generally believed that hallucinations are caused either by mental illness or by taking some kind of hallucinogenic drug, but in fact even mentally or mentally healthy people can hallucinate. 5% experience one or more hallucinations in their lifetime; When you are over 60 years old, the likelihood of hallucinations increases; Many people hallucinate when falling asleep or waking up from a sleep; People also hallucinate when they have just lost a loved one and are extremely sad, usually seeing their loved ones they love dearly. Another group of people who are prone to hallucinations are those who suddenly lose some kind of sense.
An elderly man in England had a cataract drop in eyesight, and then she hallucinated: she saw a woman dressed in English medieval costume and a child visiting one after another. Her hallucinatory symptoms are known as the "Bonner Syndrome" and refer to distinct and complex hallucinations that occur in people of normal mind.
The Bonner Expedition is named after the 18th-century Swiss scientist Charles Bonner, who was the first to describe the symptoms, and the case he describes happened to his grandfather. At the time, his grandfather also had almost zero vision in both eyes due to cataracts. One day, the old man was chatting with his granddaughters when two men in ornate red and gray cloaks appeared in front of him.
He blamed his family for not informing him of the two gentlemen's visit, but the family did not see the two men at all, and the old man realized that it was a hallucination.
For example, a auditory hallucinator named Sylvia will feel that what she hears is not like an imaginary or haunting melody in her head, but like listening to real music playing on the radio.
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May belong to:
The fear of travel that can't be retreated from - the painful illusion that can't be lost.
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If you often hallucinate, you must have some symptoms in your spirit, if it is only occasionally it may be inattention or fantasies, stress, this thing to relax, often appear should go to the hospital for examination, otherwise it will affect your life.
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Hallucinations depend on how you produce them, and hallucinations from drugs or something must be scary, which is harmful to the body.
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Hallucinations are not scary, they are actually quite normal, and they often arise inadvertently. That is to say, it is easier to produce when the subjective consciousness is weak, of course, this refers to normal people.
Hallucinations are non-realistic perceptual experiences that can involve sight, hearing, smell, and even touch, and although the things in the hallucinations do not actually happen, the experience itself can often be so convincing that some people give it supernatural meanings, such as apocalypse, psychic, etc. Illusions are real perceptions, and hallucinations are not triggered by our external environment, but rather a series of real perceptions. >>>More
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