Auditory hallucinations

Handb Clin Neurol. 2015:129:433-55. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-62630-1.00024-X.

Abstract

Auditory hallucinations constitute a phenomenologically rich group of endogenously mediated percepts which are associated with psychiatric, neurologic, otologic, and other medical conditions, but which are also experienced by 10-15% of all healthy individuals in the general population. The group of phenomena is probably best known for its verbal auditory subtype, but it also includes musical hallucinations, echo of reading, exploding-head syndrome, and many other types. The subgroup of verbal auditory hallucinations has been studied extensively with the aid of neuroimaging techniques, and from those studies emerges an outline of a functional as well as a structural network of widely distributed brain areas involved in their mediation. The present chapter provides an overview of the various types of auditory hallucination described in the literature, summarizes our current knowledge of the auditory networks involved in their mediation, and draws on ideas from the philosophy of science and network science to reconceptualize the auditory hallucinatory experience, and point out directions for future research into its neurobiologic substrates. In addition, it provides an overview of known associations with various clinical conditions and of the existing evidence for pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic treatments.

Keywords: auditory hallucination; auditory pareidolia; functional auditory network; musical hallucination; network science; structural auditory network; thalamocortical system.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Auditory Pathways / pathology*
  • Hallucinations / classification
  • Hallucinations / diagnosis*
  • Hallucinations / physiopathology*
  • Hallucinations / therapy*
  • Humans