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Are Hallucinations in Parkinson’s Driven by Over-Reliance on Prior Information?

A. Holden, M. Macaskill, D. Myall, C. Le Heron, S. Lewis, T. Anderson, K-L. Horne (Christchurch, New Zealand)

Meeting: 2025 International Congress

Keywords: Hallucinations, Parkinson’s

Category: Parkinson's Disease: Cognition / Psychiatric Manifestations / Lewy Body Dementia

Objective: Test the validity of a theoretical model that visual hallucinations in Parkinson’s arise from over-reliance on prior information.

Background: Parkinson’s hallucinations are common and a potentially distressing symptom. Gaining a better understanding of their causal mechanisms will improve patient management and quality of life. The perceptual expectation bias framework suggests hallucinations are driven by imbalance in integration of bottom-up and top-down information. We hypothesised that people with Parkinson’s hallucinations would over-rely on top-down prior knowledge in the face of direct (conflicting) sensory input, and designed a task to examine this.

Method: A visual decision-making task was completed by 52 Parkinson’s participants without dementia (mean age: 69 years, 68% male), grouped into 38 with hallucinations (assessed by PsycH-Q), 14 without hallucinations, and by 30 age-, sex- and education-similar controls. Participants judged the horizontal direction of a moving dot stimulus that varied in information from low to high certainty per trial. A directional cue (i.e., prior knowledge) could be informative in aiding the judgement, or uninformative, or irrelevant. We used mixed effects linear models to test whether Parkinson’s participants with hallucinations over-relied on the cue.

Results: The control and non-hallucination groups performed similarly. The hallucination group did not perform the task as accurately as controls (p<0.006). All three groups could adaptively use the informative cue to lift their performance when there was little directional information in the stimulus (p<0.0001). However, the uninformative cue reduced performance in all groups (p<.033). These differences remained when accounting for cognitive ability (MoCA).

Conclusion: People with Parkinson’s who experience hallucinations did not perform as well as controls on a task probing visual decision-making, but, in uncertain situations they used prior information in the same way to improve performance. Thus we did not find evidence to support the theoretical position that hallucinations are driven by over-reliance on prior knowledge. This does not invalidate the theory; a task that more directly relates to hallucinatory experiences (e.g. visual perception of natural scenes), rather than a general visuoperceptual decision-making task, may be an important next step to elucidate the mechanisms that underlie hallucinations in Parkinson’s disease.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

A. Holden, M. Macaskill, D. Myall, C. Le Heron, S. Lewis, T. Anderson, K-L. Horne. Are Hallucinations in Parkinson’s Driven by Over-Reliance on Prior Information? [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2025; 40 (suppl 1). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/are-hallucinations-in-parkinsons-driven-by-over-reliance-on-prior-information/. Accessed October 5, 2025.
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