-
Delusional misidentification syndrome is an
umbrella term,
introduced by
Christodoulou (in his book The
Delusional Misidentification Syndromes, Karger...
- Mirrored-self
misidentification is the
delusional belief that one's
reflection in the
mirror is
another person –
typically a
younger or
second version...
-
introduced to some
Pacific Islands.
Reports from
Madagascar and
Hawaii are
misidentifications of C. maculata. A
genetic study published in 2017
indicates that C...
-
plausibility of
cryptids due to lack of
physical evidence,
likely misidentifications and
misinterpretation of
stories from folklore.
While biologists regularly...
- wild
mushrooms after misidentification of a
toxic mushroom as an
edible species. The most
common reason for this
misidentification is a
close resemblance...
- and expects, to see. They may be
categorised as
misidentifications of
known animals,
misidentifications of
inanimate objects or effects, reinterpretations...
-
Indians from the
indigenous peoples of the Americas.
Although the
misidentification of
indigenous Americans as
Indians occurred during the
European colonization...
- Ellis, H.D.; Young, A.W. (August 1990). "Accounting for
delusional misidentifications". The
British Journal of Psychiatry. 157 (2): 239–48. doi:10.1192/bjp...
-
human po****tions. The
number of "false positive"
reports based on
misidentifications is considerable; in a
nationwide study where people submitted spiders...
- ISBN 978-1-137-29277-3. Devinsky,
Orrin (6
January 2009). "Delusional
misidentifications and duplications:
Right brain lesions, left
brain delusions". Neurology...