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Home » What Causes Hallucinations? – Elizabeth Cox (Transcript)

What Causes Hallucinations? – Elizabeth Cox (Transcript)

TED-Ed Video Lesson: 

An elderly woman named Rosalie was sitting in her nursing home when her room suddenly burst to life with twirling fabrics. Through the elaborate drapings, she could make out animals, children, and costumed characters.

Rosalie was alarmed, not by the intrusion, but because she knew this entourage was an extremely detailed hallucination.

Her cognitive function was excellent, and she had not taken any medications that might cause hallucinations.

Strangest of all, had a real-life crowd of circus performers burst into her room, she wouldn’t have been able to see them: she was completely blind.

Rosalie had developed a condition known as Charles Bonnet Syndrome, in which patients with either impaired vision or total blindness suddenly hallucinate whole scenes in vivid color. These hallucinations appear suddenly, and can last for mere minutes or recur for years.

We still don’t fully understand what causes them to come and go, or why certain patients develop them when others don’t.

We do know from fMRI studies that these hallucinations activate the same brain areas as sight, areas that are not activated by imagination. Many other hallucinations, including smells, sights, and sounds, also involve the same brain areas as real sensory experiences.

Because of this, the cerebral cortex is thought to play a part in hallucinations. This thin layer of grey matter covers the entire cerebrum, with different areas processing information from each of our senses.

But even in people with completely unimpaired senses, the brain constructs the world we perceive from incomplete information.

For example, our eyes have blind spots where the optic nerve blocks part of the retina. When the visual cortex processes light into coherent images, it fills in these blind spots with information from the surrounding area.

Occasionally, we might notice a glitch, but most of the time we’re none the wiser. When the visual cortex is deprived of input from the eyes, even temporarily, the brain still tries to create a coherent picture, but the limits of its abilities become a lot more obvious.

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The full-blown hallucinations of Charles Bonnet Syndrome are one example.