Visual hallucinations in psychosis: What do people actually see?
Charlotte Aynsworth, Felicity Waite, Samuel Sargeant, Clara Humpston, Robert Dudley
Psychology and psychotherapy March 1, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1111/papt.12553 via PubMed
Summary
One in three people with psychosis experience visions, often of other people, which can be highly distressing. A study involving twelve participants used semi-structured interviews to explore the nature of these visions, identifying three main themes: 'Content' (visions typically involve people), 'Coherence' (these visions behave like real humans), and 'Quality' (they appear very realistic). Understanding these aspects can help improve treatment approaches for individuals experiencing such phenomena.
Study at a glance
| Design | qualitative study |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 12 |
| Population | people with psychosis |
| Key finding | Visions experienced by individuals with psychosis are often of people and exhibit a compelling sense of realism, making them feel indistinguishable from reality. |
Abstract
One in three people with psychosis experience visions. However, little is known about what people see, and current treatments have limited benefits. To improve the understanding and treatment of visions, this study explored the phenomenology of visions in people with psychosis. Twelve people with psychosis participated in semi-structured interviews. Reflective thematic analysis was used. Three main themes were generated covering important aspects of phenomenology: 'Content', 'Coherence' and 'Quality'. The first theme 'Content: People see people', demonstrated that the most distressing visions were of people. The second theme 'Coherence: Visions of people who behave like people', captured how visions were coherent with real human behaviour, often by being multimodal experiences that spoke to and touched the observer. The third theme, 'Quality: They look too real' highlighted the compelling sense of authenticity of the visions, making them indistinguishable from reality. Visions represent what we expect to see in everyday life: people, who act and look real. This powerful combination provides insight into the absorbing and all-encompassing nature of visions and their impact on participant's lives. The framework of 'Content', 'Coherence' and 'Quality' provides guidance to support clinicians and researchers to better explore the phenomenology of visions in psychosis.