Memories Pseudohallucinatory

Memories Pseudohallucination

Pseudohalucinoid memories are memories in which images are stored that arise as a result of passive imagination under the influence of real events or phenomena perceived by the senses with extreme vividness and plausibility (hallucination).

Scientists have not come to a consensus about the meaning of these memories, since they perform several functions: - compensatory; - social; - cultural and historical; - psychoprotective. The development of pseudogalazzinatorial images is often associated with a strong emotional load due to the experience of strong emotions. Cases when a person does not remember anything from the situation that happened, but feels very vividly, indicate a clear relationship between the experience of emotional stress and the occurrence of pseudohallacinations.

Researchers insist that although pseudohallacinatory memories are a distorted reality, they nevertheless have a certain connection with real life. They testify to the enormous desire of our consciousness to create various images and fantasies. On the other hand, the social consequences of these images include compensations that promote the effective functioning of people in the social world.



Pseudogallucinosis Psychasthenics tend to easily form connections between completely different ideas. These connections, at first latent and then clearly manifested, are firmly fixed in the consciousness and determine the structure of the patient’s character. Unlike schizophrenic delusions that do not reflect reality