Auditory hallucination is the perception of sounds that have no external source — hearing music, voices, environmental noises, or abstract sonic phenomena that exist entirely within the mind. These range from faint, ambiguous whispers at the edge of perception to fully formed, complex musical compositions or conversational speech that can feel completely real and externally sourced.
Description
Phenomenology
From a first-person perspective, auditory hallucinations manifest as sounds that feel genuinely external — as though they originate from somewhere in the physical environment — despite having no corresponding source. One may hear faint music playing from another room, indistinct conversational murmuring, environmental sounds like running water or wind, or entirely novel sonic phenomena such as buzzing, chiming, or crystalline tones. At higher intensities, full musical compositions may be perceived with remarkable complexity and fidelity, sometimes in genres or styles the listener has never heard before. Voices may speak coherent sentences, sometimes addressing the user directly, though insight is usually maintained that these are drug-induced.
Dose-Dependent Spectrum
At threshold levels, auditory hallucinations present as vague, ambiguous sounds — one might question whether a faint sound was real or imagined. At light to moderate intensities, the hallucinations become more distinct: identifiable snippets of music, recognizable whispered words, or phantom environmental sounds like doorbells or phone notifications. At strong doses, fully formed auditory experiences emerge — entire songs with lyrics, complex conversations, or rich environmental soundscapes that are indistinguishable from reality until one actively questions their origin. At overwhelming levels, the hallucinated audio can completely dominate the perceptual field, making it difficult to distinguish real from imagined sound.
Subtypes and Variations
Musical hallucinations involve hearing melodies, harmonies, or complete compositions, often novel and not drawn from memory.Verbal hallucinations consist of hearing words or sentences — these may be fragments, gibberish, or coherent speech.Environmental hallucinations replicate familiar ambient sounds (rain, traffic, appliances).Abstract sonic hallucinations produce sounds without clear real-world analogues — geometric buzzing, fractal tones, or sounds that seem to have visual or spatial properties. Auditory hallucinations can beopen-eye (perceived as external) orclosed-eye (perceived as internal, mind's-ear phenomena).
Pharmacological Mechanisms
Auditory hallucinations arise from spontaneous activation of auditory cortical areas in the absence of corresponding external stimuli. Serotonergic psychedelics facilitate this through 5-HT2A agonism, which increases spontaneous neural firing in auditory association cortex and disrupts the brain's ability to distinguish internally generated signals from external input. Dissociatives produce auditory hallucinations through NMDA antagonism, which impairs sensory gating mechanisms and can lead to disinhibited firing in temporal lobe auditory regions. Deliriants such as diphenhydramine produce particularly vivid and realistic auditory hallucinations through muscarinic acetylcholine receptor antagonism, which profoundly disrupts the neurotransmitter systems involved in reality testing.
Substance Classes
Auditory hallucinations occur across many substance classes but with qualitatively different characters. Psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, DMT) tend to produce musical and abstract auditory hallucinations, often pleasant and complex.Dissociatives (ketamine, DXM, PCP) can generate immersive sonic environments, particularly during dissociative holes.Deliriants (diphenhydramine, datura) produce the most realistic and often disturbing auditory hallucinations — convincing phantom conversations and environmental sounds that are difficult to distinguish from reality.Cannabis at high doses, particularly edibles, can produce mild auditory hallucinations.Stimulant psychosis from prolonged use of amphetamines or cocaine can generate persecutory auditory hallucinations.
Safety and Harm Reduction
While psychedelic auditory hallucinations are generally benign and often enjoyable, deliriant-induced auditory hallucinations deserve serious caution — they can be indistinguishable from reality and may provoke dangerous behavioral responses. Stimulant-induced auditory hallucinations (especially persecutory voices) are a sign of psychosis and indicate a medical emergency requiring cessation of use and professional help. Individuals with a personal or family history of schizophrenia or psychotic disorders should exercise extreme caution with any substance that produces auditory hallucinations, as these effects may trigger or exacerbate underlying conditions. If hallucinated voices become commanding or frightening, this is a sign to seek immediate support.