Prevalence of multisensory hallucinations in people at risk of transition to psychosis

•A range of unusual experiences were common in people at risk of transition to psychosis•True hallucinations were rarer, and where present auditory experiences were most common•Neither unusual experiences or true hallucinations were associated with functioning or delusional ideation Hallucinations c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research 2023-04, Vol.322, p.115091-115091, Article 115091
Hauptverfasser: Dudley, Robert, Denton, Sophie, Mathewson, Jennifer, Pervez, Sairah, Aynsworth, Charlotte, Dodgson, Guy, Barclay, Nicola
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•A range of unusual experiences were common in people at risk of transition to psychosis•True hallucinations were rarer, and where present auditory experiences were most common•Neither unusual experiences or true hallucinations were associated with functioning or delusional ideation Hallucinations can occur in single or multiple sensory modalities. Greater attention has been paid to single sensory experiences with a comparative neglect of hallucinations that occur across two or more sensory modalities (multisensory hallucinations). This study explored how common these experiences were in people at risk of transition to psychosis (n=105) and considered whether a greater number of hallucinatory experiences increased delusional ideation and reduced functioning, both of which are associated with a greater risk of transition to psychosis. Participants reported a range of unusual sensory experiences, with two or three being common. However, when a strict definition of hallucinations was applied, in which the experience has the quality of a real perception and in which the person believes them to be real experiences, then multisensory experiences were rare and when reported, single sensory hallucinations in the auditory domain were most common. The number of unusual sensory experiences or hallucinations was not significantly associated with greater delusional ideation or poorer functioning. Theoretical and clinical implications are discussed.
ISSN:0165-1781
1872-7123
DOI:10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115091