Hypervigilance
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Hypervigilance is an "enhanced state of sensory sensitivity accompanied by an exaggerated intensity of behaviors whose purpose is to detect threats."[1] It may feel like paranoia, but it is not the same.[2]
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[edit] Symptomologies
Hypervigilance is a symptom of a number of stress-related disorders including:
- Post-traumatic stress disorder,
- Combat stress reaction,
- Urban survival syndrome,
- Mean World Syndrome
- Anxiety disorder
It is manifested in victims of domestic violence and stalking. It is also seen as an aspect of the psychological condition of codependence, and as needing treatment in victims of torture.
[edit] Hypervigilance versus paranoia
Hypervigilance encompasses symptoms such as:[3]
- "is a response to an external event (violence, accident, disaster, violation, intrusion, bullying, etc) and therefore an injury"
- "wears off (gets better), albeit slowly, when the person is out of and away from the situation which was the cause"
- "the hypervigilant person is acutely aware of their hypervigilance, and will easily articulate their fear, albeit using the incorrect but popularised word 'paranoia'"
While paranoia has similar, but different, symptoms including:
- "paranoia is a form of mental illness; the cause is thought to be internal, eg a minor variation in the balance of brain chemistry"
- "paranoia tends to endure and to not get better of its own accord"
- "the paranoiac will not admit to feeling paranoid, as they cannot see their paranoia"
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- "Hypervigilance" at Hypnosense
- "Do you know signs of hypervigilance?" at Seattle PI
- "Conditions for hypervigilance" at University of Maryland Medical Center (UMMC)
- "Hypervigilance & Anxiety" at Help4Trauma.org
- "Symptoms"
- "An examination of hypervigilance for external threat in individuals with generalized anxiety disorder and individuals with persecutory delusions using visual scan paths"