How much of what you see is a hallucination? - Elizabeth Cox

4,673,186 views ・ 2018-06-26

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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An elderly woman named Rosalie was sitting in her nursing home
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when her room suddenly burst to life with twirling fabrics.
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Through the elaborate drapings,
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she could make out animals,
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children,
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and costumed characters.
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Rosalie was alarmed, not by the intrusion,
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but because she knew this entourage was an extremely detailed hallucination.
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Her cognitive function was excellent,
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and she had not taken any medications that might cause hallucinations.
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Strangest of all, had a real-life crowd of circus performers burst into her room,
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she wouldn’t have been able to see them:
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she was completely blind.
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Rosalie had developed a condition known as Charles Bonnet Syndrome,
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in which patients with either impaired vision or total blindness
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suddenly hallucinate whole scenes in vivid color.
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These hallucinations appear suddenly,
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and can last for mere minutes or recur for years.
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We still don’t fully understand what causes them to come and go,
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or why certain patients develop them when others don’t.
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We do know from fMRI studies that these hallucinations
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activate the same brain areas as sight,
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areas that are not activated by imagination.
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Many other hallucinations, including smells,
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sights,
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and sounds,
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also involve the same brain areas as real sensory experiences.
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Because of this, the cerebral cortex is thought to play a part in hallucinations.
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This thin layer of grey matter covers the entire cerebrum,
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with different areas processing information from each of our senses.
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But even in people with completely unimpaired senses,
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the brain constructs the world we perceive from incomplete information.
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For example, our eyes have blind spots
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where the optic nerve blocks part of the retina.
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When the visual cortex processes light into coherent images,
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it fills in these blind spots with information from the surrounding area.
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Occasionally, we might notice a glitch, but most of the time we’re none the wiser.
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When the visual cortex is deprived of input from the eyes, even temporarily,
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the brain still tries to create a coherent picture,
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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.
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Because Charles Bonnet Syndrome only occurs in people
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who had normal vision and then lost their sight,
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not those who were born blind,
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scientists think the brain uses remembered images
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to compensate for the lack of new visual input.
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And the same is true for other senses.
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People with hearing loss often hallucinate music or voices,
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sometimes as elaborate as the cacophony of an entire marching band.
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In addition to sensory deprivation,
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recreational and therapeutic drugs,
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conditions like epilepsy and narcolepsy,
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and psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia,
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are a few of the many known causes of hallucinations,
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and we’re still finding new ones.
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Some of the most notorious hallucinations
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are associated with drugs like LSD and psilocybin.
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Their hallmark effects include the sensation that dry objects are wet
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and that surfaces are breathing.
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At higher doses, the visual world can appear to melt,
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dissolve into swirls,
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or burst into fractal-like patterns.
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Evidence suggests these drugs also act on the cerebral cortex.
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But while visual impairment typically only causes visual hallucinations,
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and hearing loss auditory ones,
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substances like LSD cause perceptual disturbances across all the senses.
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That’s likely because they activate receptors in a broad range of brain areas,
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including the cortical regions for all the senses.
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LSD and psilocybin both function like serotonin in the brain,
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binding directly to one type of serotonin receptor in particular.
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While serotonin’s role in the brain is complex and poorly understood,
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it likely plays an important part in integrating information
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from the eyes,
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nose,
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ears,
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and other sensory organs.
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So one theory is that LSD and psilocybin cause hallucinations
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by disrupting the signaling involved in sensory integration.
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Hallucinations associated with schizophrenia
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may share a similar mechanism with those caused by LSD and psilocybin.
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Patients with schizophrenia
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often have elevated levels of serotonin in the brain.
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And antipsychotic drugs relieve symptoms of schizophrenia
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by blocking the same serotonin receptors LSD and psilocybin bind to.
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And, in some cases,
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these drugs can even relieve the hallucinations
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of patients with Charles Bonnet Syndrome.
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We’re still a long way from understanding all the different causes
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and interconnected mechanisms of hallucinations.
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But it’s clear that hallucinatory experiences
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are much more closely tied to ordinary perception than we once thought.
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And by studying hallucinations,
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we stand to learn a great deal
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about how our brains construct the world we see,
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hear,
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smell,
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and touch.
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As we learn more,
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we’ll likely come to appreciate just how subjective and individual
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each person’s island universe of perception really is.
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