Cognitive Vulnerability to Auditory Hallucination
- 1 September 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Royal College of Psychiatrists in The British Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 143 (3) , 294-299
- https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.143.3.294
Abstract
Goldstone and Sarbin proposed that auditory hallucinations occur because imagery in a non-preferred sensory mode is more easily misinterpreted as having an external origin. This led to the hypothesis that auditory hallucinators would show less preference for auditory than for visual imagery. Our results suggest that this is true. We also compared the vividness of internally-generated auditory imagery with that of visual imagery, independently of preference, to see whether vividness was impaired in the nonpreferred mode in hallucinators. The evidence suggested that this was not the case, but we did find a significantly deficient capacity for creating vivid images of either kind in process patients (i.e. those with poor premorbid status) compared with reactive (good premorbid) patients, regardless of any history of hallucinations. The withdrawal of external attention which characterizes process patients might also be expected to impair their ability to confirm or disconfirm the external origin of an auditory stimulus. We predicted therefore that process hallucinators would be particularly incompetent in spatial location of sounds: our experimental results confirmed this to be the case.This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Impaired recognition of self-expressed thought in patients with auditory hallucinations.Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1980
- Are there two kinds of thinking in process and reactive schizophrenics?Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 1974
- Human information processing and sensory modality: Cross-modal functions, information complexity, memory, and deficit.Psychological Bulletin, 1974
- Validational study of marital status and the self-report scale for process-reactive schizophrenia.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1969
- Validational study of the self-report scale for process-reactive schizophrenia.Journal of Consulting Psychology, 1967
- The problem of attention in research and theory in schizophrenia.Psychological Review, 1964
- THE DEVELOPMENT OF A SELF-REPORT MEASURE OF THE PROCESS-REACTIVE CONTINUUMJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1964
- RELATION OF MENTAL IMAGERY TO HALLUCINATIONSArchives of Neurology & Psychiatry, 1947
- The diagnosis of mental imagery.Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 1912
- Methods for the determination of mental imagery.Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 1910