Woods Angela, Jones Nev, Alderson-Day Ben, Callard Felicity, Fernyhough Charles
Centre for Medical Humanities and School of Medicine, Pharmacy and Health, Durham University, Durham, UK.
Department of Anthropology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA; Lived Experience Research Network, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Lancet Psychiatry. 2015 Apr;2(4):323-31. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(15)00006-1. Epub 2015 Mar 31.
Auditory hallucinations--or voices--are a common feature of many psychiatric disorders and are also experienced by individuals with no psychiatric history. Understanding of the variation in subjective experiences of hallucination is central to psychiatry, yet systematic empirical research on the phenomenology of auditory hallucinations remains scarce. We aimed to record a detailed and diverse collection of experiences, in the words of the people who hear voices themselves.
We made a 13 item questionnaire available online for 3 months. To elicit phenomenologically rich data, we designed a combination of open-ended and closed-ended questions, which drew on service-user perspectives and approaches from phenomenological psychiatry, psychology, and medical humanities. We invited people aged 16-84 years with experience of voice-hearing to take part via an advertisement circulated through clinical networks, hearing voices groups, and other mental health forums. We combined qualitative and quantitative methods, and used inductive thematic analysis to code the data and χ(2) tests to test additional associations of selected codes.
Between Sept 9 and Nov 29, 2013, 153 participants completed the study. Most participants described hearing multiple voices (124 [81%] of 153 individuals) with characterful qualities (106 [69%] individuals). Less than half of the participants reported hearing literally auditory voices--70 (46%) individuals reported either thought-like or mixed experiences. 101 (66%) participants reported bodily sensations while they heard voices, and these sensations were significantly associated with experiences of abusive or violent voices (p=0·024). Although fear, anxiety, depression, and stress were often associated with voices, 48 (31%) participants reported positive emotions and 49 (32%) reported neutral emotions. Our statistical analysis showed that mixed voices were more likely to have changed over time (p=0·030), be internally located (p=0·010), and be conversational in nature (p=0·010).
This study is, to our knowledge, the largest mixed-methods investigation of auditory hallucination phenomenology so far. Our survey was completed by a diverse sample of people who hear voices with various diagnoses and clinical histories. Our findings both overlap with past large-sample investigations of auditory hallucination and suggest potentially important new findings about the association between acoustic perception and thought, somatic and multisensorial features of auditory hallucinations, and the link between auditory hallucinations and characterological entities.
Wellcome Trust.
幻听,即听到声音,是许多精神疾病的常见症状,无精神病史的个体也会出现幻听。了解幻觉主观体验的差异是精神病学的核心,但关于幻听现象学的系统实证研究仍然匮乏。我们旨在以幻听患者自己的话语记录详细多样的体验集。
我们在网上发布了一份包含13个条目的问卷,为期3个月。为了获取现象学丰富的数据,我们设计了开放式和封闭式问题相结合的问卷,这些问题借鉴了服务使用者的观点以及现象学精神病学、心理学和医学人文学科的方法。我们通过临床网络、幻听群体及其他心理健康论坛发布广告,邀请16 - 84岁有幻听经历的人参与。我们结合了定性和定量方法,使用归纳主题分析对数据进行编码,并使用χ²检验来检验所选编码的其他关联。
在2013年9月9日至11月29日期间,153名参与者完成了研究。大多数参与者描述听到多个声音(153人中有124人[81%]),且这些声音具有鲜明特征(106人[69%])。不到一半的参与者报告听到的是实实在在的听觉声音——70人(46%)报告有类似思维或混合体验。101人(66%)参与者在听到声音时有身体感觉,这些感觉与辱骂性或暴力性声音的体验显著相关(p = 0·024)。尽管恐惧、焦虑、抑郁和压力常与幻听相关,但48人(31%)报告有积极情绪,49人(32%)报告有中性情绪。我们的统计分析表明,混合性声音更有可能随时间变化(p = 0·030)、位于内心(p = 0·010)且本质上具有对话性(p = 0·010)。
据我们所知,本研究是迄今为止关于幻听现象学最大规模的混合方法调查。我们的调查由具有不同诊断和临床病史的幻听患者多样样本完成。我们的研究结果既与过去关于幻听的大样本调查结果重叠,又表明了关于听觉感知与思维之间的关联、幻听的躯体和多感官特征以及幻听与人格实体之间联系的潜在重要新发现。
惠康信托基金会。