by Hearing the Voice | Oct 28, 2013 | Hearing Voices Network & Voice Collective Events, HtV Publications, HtV Research, Publications
In November 2011, with the support of the Wellcome Trust and Durham University’s Institute of Advanced Study (IAS), Hearing the Voice brought 45 experts by experience and profession together for the world’s first interdisciplinary research workshop on voice-hearing....
by Hearing the Voice | Oct 3, 2013 | HtV Publications, Other publications, Uncategorized
Charles Fernyhough and HtV team members Richard Bentall and Simon McCarthy-Jones have recently published articles in Hallucination, a new collection of essays by scientists and philosophers edited by Fiona Macpherson and Dimitris Platchias. The volume is described on...
by Hearing the Voice | Jun 18, 2013 | HtV Publications, HtV Research |
My research in the Hearing the Voice project starts with the deceptively simple question: what is it we are studying? In a presentation at the Hearing Voices symposium at Stanford earlier this year, I explored how voices or auditory verbal hallucinations have been...
by Hearing the Voice | Jun 7, 2013 | HtV Publications, HtV Research, Ideas & Opinions, Uncategorized |
The Hearing the Voice team were very excited to see project director Charles Fernyhough’s article ‘Life in the Chatter Box’ in the New Scientist this week. The article focuses on recent research into inner speech and its role in shaping the distinctive properties of...
by Hearing the Voice | May 1, 2013 | HtV Publications, Other publications
The Project for Spirituality, Theology and Health at Durham University is delighted to announce Spirituality, Theology and Mental Health: Multidisciplinary Perspectives edited by Professor Christopher Cook. Chris is also a member of the Hearing the Voice research...
by Hearing the Voice | Apr 17, 2013 | Cultural & Media Events, HtV Publications, Other publications |
How do we experience the voices in our minds? How do voices help or hinder our navigation of familiar and unfamiliar spaces, when wandering alone or when moving through a crowd? Where do ‘hallucinated’ voices come from and how are they linked to specific places? How...