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1 an in patients, especially those with severe auditory hallucinations.
2 ia and related to positive symptoms, such as auditory hallucinations.
3 hippocampal activity at baseline and during auditory hallucinations.
4 reprepared) substrate for the development of auditory hallucinations.
5 ne or more psychotic symptoms, most commonly auditory hallucinations.
6 ery in schizophrenic patients predisposed to auditory hallucinations.
7 chanism to explain positive symptoms such as auditory hallucinations.
10 lap with past large-sample investigations of auditory hallucination and suggest potentially important
11 uditory hallucinations, and the link between auditory hallucinations and characterological entities.
14 ally characterized by paranoid delusions and auditory hallucinations and often associated with distur
16 th schizophrenia with a history of prominent auditory hallucinations and six comparison subjects unde
18 hronic schizophrenia (10 of whom experienced auditory hallucinations and/or delusions of control) and
19 itive symptom factors (bizarre delusions and auditory hallucinations), and a disorganization factor.
20 ught, somatic and multisensorial features of auditory hallucinations, and the link between auditory h
21 r patients with hallucinations, particularly auditory hallucinations, antipsychotic discontinuation s
24 tes that schizophrenia patients are prone to auditory hallucinations because they have difficulty rec
25 lation of the primary auditory cortex evokes auditory hallucination but does not distort or interfere
26 senting with extensive bizarre delusions and auditory hallucinations but no prominent negative sympto
27 his effect was present for the subgroup with auditory hallucinations, but not the subgroup with visua
28 ul means of measuring neural activity during auditory hallucinations, but the results from previous s
29 her's exact test, one-tailed, P = 0.003) and auditory hallucinations (Fisher's exact test, one-tailed
31 delusions (HR, 1.00 [95% CI, 1.00-1.01]) and auditory hallucinations (HR, 0.99 [95% CI, 0.97-1.00]) a
32 rior-temporal gyrus of either hemisphere and auditory hallucination; (ii) left superior-/middle-tempo
34 ory comprehension during movements and drive auditory hallucinations in pathological states, the syna
37 in ameliorating positive symptoms, including auditory hallucinations, in schizophrenia are not fully
38 with focal dystonia, epileptic seizures, and auditory hallucinations indicate symptom reductions foll
49 atients with schizophrenia who were prone to auditory hallucinations show attenuated activation when
50 schizophrenia who were experiencing frequent auditory hallucinations, using a novel functional magnet
51 pathy, depression, delusions, disinhibition, auditory hallucinations, visual hallucinations, irritabi
52 patient group, the propensity to experience auditory hallucinations was associated with relatively i
54 ucleus in the thalamus while lesions causing auditory hallucinations were connected to the dentate nu
55 ise classifiable groups (P < 0.001), whereas auditory hallucinations were more common in the psychiat
57 airment and the presence of visual and other auditory hallucinations, were evaluated independently in