1. [PDF] actice
Hallucinations similar to those that accompany the near-death experience can be produced by: (A) oxygen deprivation. B) dehydration. C) narcolepsy. D ...
2. How else can hallucinations similar to those that accompany the near ...
How else can hallucinations similar to those that accompany the near-death experience be produced? Consciousness: Consciousness is the way we perceive and ...
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3. Ayahuasca compound changes brainwaves to vivid 'waking-dream ...
Nov 19, 2019 · Accounts from people who have taken DMT report intense visual hallucinations often accompanied by strong emotional experiences and even ' ...
Scientists have peered inside the brain to show how taking DMT affects human consciousness by significantly altering the brain’s electrical activity.

4. The neuropharmacology of sleep paralysis hallucinations: serotonin ...
Oct 5, 2018 · Like hallucinations produced by LSD for instance, hallucinatory experiences during sleep paralysis can include sensory distortions and the ...
Sleep paralysis is a state of involuntary immobility occurring at sleep onset or offset, often accompanied by uncanny “ghost-like” hallucinations and extreme fear reactions. I provide here a neuropharmacological account for these hallucinatory ...

5. Hallucinations similar to those that accompany the near-death ...
Hallucinations similar to those that accompany the near-death experience can be produced by. oxygen deprivation. dehydration. narcolepsy. dissociation.
See AlsoDr. Stein Soul Eater
6. [PDF] Do We Need a New Word to Supplement "Hallucination"?
If I am correct in asserting our need for a new word denoting a variety of unshared sensory experiences, we could adopt a phrase like "idiosyncractic perception ...
7. [DOC] states of consciousness - Mayfield City Schools
The reports of people who have had near-death experiences are very similar to the __HALLUCINATIONS__ reported by drug users. These experiences may be the result ...
8. All About PTSD and Hallucinations | Psych Central
Apr 15, 2022 · Hallucinations are sensory experiences that can arise from an interruption in reality. They can involve any of your senses, meaning you can see, ...
Though not included in DSM-5 criteria, research suggests hallucinations may be more common with PTSD than originally thought.

9. [DOC] Chapter 7 notes
... produce the experience. Age regression claims hypnotized ... Near Death Experiences. 1. A state of consciousness reported after being close to death. 2. May ...
10. [PDF] Dying: a spiritual experience as shown by Near Death Experiences ...
In this talk I would like to suggest that dying is a process. First of all, I shall discuss those experiences which occur in the 24 hours or so before death - ...
11. [PDF] States of Consciousness
The reports of people who have had near-death experiences are very similar to the reported by drug users. ... They do not produce hallucinations such as those ...
12. Anomalous Experiences, Trauma, and Symbolization Processes at the ...
Nov 30, 2015 · First, we study the links between anomalous experiences and hallucinatory processes, by showing that anomalous experiences frequently occur as a ...
Anomalous or exceptional experiences are uncommon experiences which are usually interpreted as being paranormal by those who report them. These experiences have long remained difficult to explain, but current progress in cognitive neuroscience and psychoanalysis sheds light on the contexts in which they emerge, as well as on their underlying processes. Following a brief description of the different types of anomalous experiences, we underline how they can be better understood at the frontiers between psychoanalysis and cognitive neurosciences. In this regard, three main lines of research are discussed and illustrated, alongside clinical cases which come from a clinical service specializing in anomalous experiences. First, we study the links between anomalous experiences and hallucinatory processes, by showing that anomalous experiences frequently occur as a specific reaction to negative life events, in which case they mainly take the form of non-pathological hallucinations. Next, we propose to analyze these experiences from the perspective of their traumatic aspects and the altered states of consciousness they often imply. Finally, these experiences are considered to be the consequence of a hypersensitivity that can be linked to an increase in psychic permeability. In conclusion, these different processes lead us to consider anomalous experiences as primary forms of symbolization and transformation of the subjective experience, especially during, or after traumatic situati...

13. Hallucinations and dementia | Alzheimer's Society
Diseases that cause inflammation and infection, such as pneumonia, can interfere with brain function and cause delirium. Some people with delirium will have ...
Dementia may cause a person to have hallucinations or see things that aren't there. This is most common in people living with dementia with Lewy bodies, although other types of dementia may also cause hallucinations.

14. [PDF] Near-Death Experiences: A Neurophysiologic Explanatory Model
We present a neurophysiological explanation for NDEs based on their similarities with lysergic acid-, ketamine-, and hypercapnia-induced hallucinations. We ...
15. Treatments for Sleep Changes - Alzheimer's Association
If sleep medications are used, an attempt should be made to discontinue them after a regular sleep pattern has been established. The type of medication ...
Get information and resources for Alzheimer's and other dementias from the Alzheimer's Association.

16. Hallucinations Under Psychedelics and in the Schizophrenia Spectrum
Sep 18, 2020 · Increased early visual activity but decreased processing in associative visual areas was also observed after psilocybin administration,33 ...
Abstract. The recent renaissance of psychedelic science has reignited interest in the similarity of drug-induced experiences to those more commonly observed in

17. Deathbed Phenomena in Hospice Care: The Social Work Response
Holden makes the point that not all of these features will necessarily occur in any given NDE and that experiences "can range from simple, with few and/or less ...
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18. The Near-Death Experience: A Reality Check? - MDPI
... can say that the content of NDE had substantial consistency in these answers”. ... Similar criticisms could be made against van Lommel whose actual study ...
This paper critically reviews assertions that near-death and out-of-body experiences (ND/OBE) offer proof of extra-corporeal existence when the brain is supposedly “dead”. While this field has almost moved away from mere anecdotal recording, the current trend is focussed on demonstrating existence without functional brains. These endeavours have fallen far short of anticipated results—that cardiac patients would report on strategically-placed markers around acute resuscitation units. Two problems arise: a failure to produce corroborative empirical evidence for extra-corporeal cognition (a) when the brain is “dead”, (or “clinically dead”, so-called) and (b) how the memory required for recall could paradoxically be set down at that critical time-point. The view advanced here is that ND/OBE occur as subjects’ states are returning to complete resumption of conscious-awareness and which, from several published accounts, is particularly abrupt but which nevertheless accounts perfectly for memory—and recall. Similar transcendental adventures accompanying returns to conscious-awareness occur with other preceding states of reduced consciousness. Most recollections are intensely geo-physical, anthropomorphic, banal and illogical: their dream-like fantasy provides nothing revelatory about life without a brain, or importantly, about other supposed cosmic contexts. Additionally, it is proposed that since prevalence rates are so extremely low (<1% globally), the few subjects undergoing ND/OBE may have predisposed brains, genetically, structurally or resulting from previous psychological stress. In a somewhat similar vein to post-traumatic stress disorder, subjects with predisposed brains exhibit markedly changed post-experiential phenotypes, so that the ND/OBE itself could be viewed as a transient, accompanying epiphenomenon.

19. [PDF] “hearing voices” and exceptional experiences - HAL-SHS
Auditory-verbal hallucinations are the most studied hallucinations (e.g., Freeman &. Garety, 2003); this could be because they didn't fully fit in the canonical ...