How is a true hallucination different from a pseudohallucination?

What will be an ideal response?


Ans: A true hallucination is a perception of images or sounds that are not real. Pseudo-hallucinations are the altered perception of things that are real.
Answer Location: LSD’s Mild Physiological Effects and Profound Hallucinogenic Effects

Psychology

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The Law of Effect was proposed by

a. Pavlov. b. Skinner. c. Thorndike. d. Watson. e. Tolman.

Psychology

How does stigma affect treatment-seeking behavior for individuals with anxiety-related disorders?

a. It increases the probability of seeking treatment so as to avoid stigma. b. It delays a person from seeking treatment, but would not prevent a person from seeking treatment in the end. c. It makes a person less likely to seek treatment. d. It makes a person more likely to seek treatment, and to seek it more quickly than if there is no stigma.

Psychology

According to research on the testing effect,

a. although testing can improve recall, it is not as helpful as spending the same amount of time studying. b. testing consistently improves recall, no matter whether the retention interval is short or long. c. this effect operates only when students receive feedback on their test scores. d. one explanation is that test-taking creates desirable difficulties.

Psychology

Your analyst tells you that the reason you cannot remember your early childhood is because you have repressed it. According to Sigmund Freud, unconscious, repressed experiences

a. have never really existed. b. can easily be brought into conscious awareness. c. are no longer threatening. d. can still influence your behavior.

Psychology