# Hallucinations: The science of idiosyncratic perception
#### (2008) - André Aleman, Frank Larøi
**Link**:: https://psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/2009-00737-000.pdf
**DOI**:: 10.1037/11751-000
**Links**::
**Tags**:: #paper
**Cite Key**:: [@Aleman2008-xn]
### Abstract
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Hearing voices when nobody speaks or seeing objects no one else sees–hallucinations are intriguing phenomena that have puzzled clinicians, researchers, and lay people alike for centuries. In this book, authors André Aleman and Frank Larøi review the latest research on the cognitive and neural bases of hallucinations and outline their unique neurobiology by drawing on evidence from brain imaging and neurotransmission studies. Detailed attention is paid to hallucination characteristics in different forms of psychosis as well as other clinical groups and conditions, such as brain damage, Charles Bonnet syndrome, dementia, and chemical substance abuse. The authors integrate the wealth of recent findings into a cohesive framework and put forward a comprehensive, multicomponent model of hallucinations. They also explore treatment of hallucinations, ranging from pharmacotherapy and cognitive therapy to transcranial magnetic stimulation. A comprehensive list of available hallucination questionnaires and scales is also included as a handy clinical assessment resource. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
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### Notes