Pseudohallucinations Hypnagogic

Pseudohallucinogenic disorders are a group of perceptual disorders in which there is a distorted perception of external stimuli. Pseudogallusions are more common than hallucinations, and differ from the latter in that a person knows about their presence, but does not recognize them as true. However, unlike genuine hallucinosis, which is psychosis, pseudohallucination does not lead to life-threatening changes in human behavior. Such a patient perceives them “as his own thoughts,” but emanating from the surrounding world.

All people at least once in their lives have felt the impact of an illusion when falling asleep. But no matter how many such episodes are experienced, the phenomena are associated with the physics of dreams and another science - hypnosis. Hypnagogia or daydreaming helps to delve deeper into the imagination and contributes to their fulfillment during sleep. At this moment, the brain is in an active state, as if the person has just woken up and continues to think at the level of reality. For each of us, this phase has its own meaning: someone falls asleep at this time, someone dreams of the future, someone reflects on the past, and someone meets mystical characters from their subconscious.

Hypnagodagia was first described by the German psychiatrist Adolf Meistern in 1916



Pseudogallucinari: a modern view

The problem of pseudogallocschuinares remains one of the most controversial in neurology. Pseudogallocynara are pictures that occur in the absence of an external stimulus. This phenomenon can be caused by a number of reasons, including physiological activity