Mason Oliver J, Brady Francesca
Department of Clinical, Educational, and Health Psychology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
J Nerv Ment Dis. 2009 Oct;197(10):783-5. doi: 10.1097/NMD.0b013e3181b9760b.
People experiencing sensory deprivation often report perceptual disturbances such as hallucinations, especially over extended periods of time. However, there is little evidence concerning short-term sensory deprivation and whether its effects differ depending on the individual concerned, and in particular their proneness to psychosis. This study explored whether perceptual disturbances could be elicited by a brief period of complete isolation from sound and vision in both highly hallucination prone and nonhallucination prone groups. Greater psychotomimetic experiences taking the form of perceptual disturbances, paranoia, and anhedonia were found across both groups when under sensory deprivation. In addition, hallucination-prone individuals experienced more perceptual disturbances when placed in short-term sensory deprivation than nonprone individuals. This result is discussed in terms of difficulties in source monitoring as a possible mechanism involved in proneness to hallucinations.
经历感觉剥夺的人经常报告出现诸如幻觉等感知障碍,尤其是在长时间的情况下。然而,关于短期感觉剥夺以及其影响是否因相关个体的不同而有所差异,特别是他们患精神病的倾向,几乎没有证据。本研究探讨了在高度易幻觉组和不易幻觉组中,短暂完全隔绝声音和视觉是否会引发感知障碍。在感觉剥夺状态下,两组均发现了以感知障碍、偏执和快感缺失形式出现的更强的拟精神病体验。此外,与不易幻觉的个体相比,易幻觉个体在短期感觉剥夺状态下经历了更多的感知障碍。本文从源监测困难的角度讨论了这一结果,将其作为易幻觉倾向中可能涉及的一种机制。