Hallucinations Tactile

Hallucination is a distorted perception of reality, in which there are sensory sensations that arise in the mind without any external stimuli. A distinctive feature of all types of hallucinations is illusoryness. The inability to feel something due to the absence of an object or event. They are better known for their similarity to elementary processes. This type of paranoid delusion often affects the functioning of the senses. These sensations are very often vivid and can sometimes even seem like reality. The word hallucination itself comes from the Latin hallucinatio, the translation of which sounds like “strange vision.”

“Hallucinatory microperceptions” are a phenomenon of perception. Individuals constantly feel slight tactile vibrations, usually regarded as subjective muscle sensations. The author of the hypothesis, Martin Cohen, notes that the fact of tactile hallucinosis is absent, but its probable probability is realized due to the presence of other perceptual doubts or their elements that are not noticed in everyday life.