Humpston Clara S, Woodward Todd S
Department of Psychology, University of York, York, UK; School of Psychology, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK.
Department of Psychiatry, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada; BC Mental Health and Substance Use Services Research Institute, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Lancet Psychiatry. 2024 Aug;11(8):658-664. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(24)00061-0. Epub 2024 Apr 14.
In much contemporary psychiatric training and practice, there is a strong emphasis on the audible or perceptual quality and externality of auditory verbal hallucinations in clinical assessments. A typical question during clinical assessment is asking whether the voices that a person hears sound identical to the way the clinician's voice is heard. In this Personal View, we argue that the most important factor in auditory verbal hallucinations in schizophrenia spectrum psychoses is a loss of first-person authority, and that a perceptual quality is not required for it to be this kind of hallucination. We draw on evidence from cognitive neuroscience showing that the activation of brain networks retrieved during capture of auditory verbal hallucinations that were experienced when a patient was in a functional MRI scanner does not match activation of networks retrieved during auditory perception. We propose that, despite early writings by Esquirol and Schneider that defined auditory verbal hallucinations as beliefs in perception rather than true perception, cognitive neuroscience, psychiatric training and practice, and patients adopting clinical vocabulary have been strongly influenced by the progression of the diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia, which increasingly place emphasis on language, such as the "full force" of a true perception. We hold that this change has resulted in an unhelpful top-down influence on the field, imposing perceptual qualities on auditory verbal hallucinations, and leading to misunderstandings and inaccuracies in clinical practice and patients' self-reports, and misinterpretations in cognitive neuroscience. We encourage a revision of the definition of auditory verbal hallucinations to move away from the necessity for auditory perception, and towards beliefs in perception due to the loss of first-person authority.
在当代许多精神病学培训和实践中,临床评估非常强调听觉言语幻觉的可听性或感知特性以及外部性。临床评估中的一个典型问题是询问一个人听到的声音是否听起来与临床医生的声音一模一样。在这篇个人观点文章中,我们认为精神分裂症谱系精神病中听觉言语幻觉的最重要因素是第一人称权威的丧失,并且这种幻觉并不需要感知特性。我们借鉴认知神经科学的证据,该证据表明,患者在功能性磁共振成像扫描仪中经历听觉言语幻觉时所激活的脑网络,与听觉感知过程中所激活的网络不匹配。我们提出,尽管埃斯奎罗尔和施耐德早期的著作将听觉言语幻觉定义为对感知的信念而非真实感知,但认知神经科学、精神病学培训与实践以及采用临床术语的患者都受到了精神分裂症诊断标准演变的强烈影响,这些标准越来越强调语言,比如真实感知的“十足力量”。我们认为这种变化对该领域产生了不利的自上而下的影响,将感知特性强加于听觉言语幻觉,导致临床实践和患者自我报告中的误解与不准确,以及认知神经科学中的错误解读。我们鼓励修订听觉言语幻觉的定义,摒弃对听觉感知的必要性,转而关注由于第一人称权威丧失而产生的对感知的信念。