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Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

author:CetusTalk

There are many ways for people to detach themselves from reality, but the unique way of Yunnan people must be to eat poisonous mushrooms...

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

According to the records of netizens who have eaten: Not long after eating mushrooms, a group of villains climbed in from the collar of their chests and said that they wanted to check their bodies...

That's right in front of me.

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

Then the whole room began to vibrate with pulse and breathing. From the side of the pupil to the head of the eye, deep in the nasal cavity, in the hairs and folds... The little man sneaks in and out of each pore, and every inch of skin outside the pores begins to be full of rhythm... Countless sources began to resonate!

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

The center of the world, deep in the earth's crust, did not hold back the vibrations. The villains win, they seem to be born actors, and the family lives in Hollywood.

No wonder Yunnan people will say when they scold people for being crazy: You are afraid of eating mushrooms! Every year in June and July, there are always people who hesitate to go to the hospital because they are obsessed with the "dreamy feeling", and finally lie down under the wonderful obscenity of the villain.

In fact, many people who do not eat poisonous mushrooms will also enter this illusion.

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

Of all the dizzying complexities, the human brain is the most extraordinary.

The brain is able to invent realistic experiences, such as seeing villains. In fact, few researchers are currently trying to figure out the reasons behind these strange experiences.

In the early 1900s, French psychiatrist Raoul Leroy was fascinated by the illusion of seeing villains. For him, this is the mystery of the mind.

"This hallucination exists outside of any microscopy, and the patient has a normal conception of the size of the surrounding objects," Leroy wrote in a case-specific introduction.

"They sometimes occur alone, sometimes with other psychological sensory disorders."

Leroy's documented cases are very diverse, but overall, he notes that the villains are brightly dressed, flexible, and mostly amiable. Occasionally it was a single little person, although most patients reported appearing in droves, interacting with the physical world as if they really existed, climbing chairs, huddled under doors, and following the laws of gravity.

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

Not all experiences are so mild. In one study, Leroy reported a 50-year-old woman with chronic alcoholism who claimed to have seen two men "as tall as a finger," dressed in blue and smoking pipes, sitting high on a telegraph line. During the treatment, the patient even claimed to have heard voices threatening to kill her.

We might think that it's just an illusion, which Leroy interprets as a possible symptom of a mental illness that deserves to be triaged so that doctors can come up with better ways to diagnose or even treat the disorder.

Influenced by Leroy's work, some psychologists have tried to explain the phenomenon. Descriptions are mostly limited to unverifiable hypotheses, involving the mysterious functioning of the midbrain, or some sort of Freudian theory.

Despite this early exploration, the illusion of a villain is not used as a criterion for any disease in the international statistical classification of diseases and related health problems. This seems to be an almost random bug in the brain.

There is only one exception, and that is Bonner syndrome.

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

We see with our eyes, but we also see with our brains. Looking at it with the brain, this is what we often call imagination. We are familiar with our own imaginary patterns, the inner world, which accompany us throughout our lives. Beyond imagination, however, there are hallucinations.

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

Pictured: The world seen by Bonner syndrome people

Charles Bonnet syndrome (CBS) is a distinct and complex hallucination that occurs in mentally healthy people. The symptom is named after the Swiss naturalist Charles Bonnet, who first described his 87-year-old grandfather in 1760. His grandfather was nearly blind because of cataracts, but he could see visions of men, women, birds, vehicles, buildings, tapestries, and totems.

It's not hard to imagine the brain's visual system being involved in this process, and studies of MRI scans of people with Bonner syndrome support this. However, in order to have more valuable research results and treatment methods, there is still a lack of detailed neurological investigation.

Scientists believe that the loss of peripheral sensory input may mean that the parts of the brain that are normally involved in processing information are disengaged from the task, bringing together the insignificant stimuli they can find, weaving together a wonderful scene of crowds and colors.

The fact that this is a common experience for patients with Bonner syndrome, while for people with conditions such as Parkinson's, hallucinations are sometimes reported at dusk seems to increase the importance of this hypothesis.

Villains Hallucinations: Have you ever seen villains?

Source: Bio Valley

Other models could also explain these illusions, such as "dream invasion", which is also a possible way, in which the usually repressed image bubbles up under the "blanket" of everyday perception, mixing with reality in strange ways. Or it could be a mixture of neurological phenomena, stealing inspiration from memory, or reinterpreting other mundane bodily sensations.

Considering the tiny figures of people in folklore around the world, in the form of mischievous elves and mischievous little ghosts, or terrible demons or clever old dwarfs, we seem to be more fascinated by stories than by neurologic mechanisms.

Maybe one day this will change, and our descriptions of villains will tell us about the workings of the brain and the cultural heritage of humanity.

To learn more about the mysteries, I recommend interested partners to study by Prof. Prof. Thomas, tenured professor of behavioral neuroscience at University College London. K. J brought "Clinical Neuroscience and Brain Science Research Based on Medical Imaging Technology", exploring neuroscience, understanding how the neural circuits assembled during development feel the surrounding world, how to implement behavior, and how to create villains out of thin air in front of your eyes, add the public number [Cetus tutor said] To learn more about it

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