hallucination
nounEtymology
Derives from the verb hallucinate, from Latin hallucinatus. Compare French hallucination. The first known usage in the English language is from Sir Thomas Browne.
- derived from hallucination
- derived from hallucinatus
Definitions
A sensory perception of something that does not exist, often arising from disorder of the…
A sensory perception of something that does not exist, often arising from disorder of the nervous system, as in delirium tremens.
- Hallucinations are always evidence of cerebral derangement and are common phenomena of insanity.
- The authorities said that the spinach had caused “possible food-related toxic reactions” with those affected experiencing symptoms including delirium, hallucinations, blurred vision, rapid heartbeat and fever.
The act of hallucinating
The act of hallucinating; a wandering of the mind; an error, mistake or blunder.
- This must have been the hallucination of the transcriber.
A confident but incorrect response given by an artificial intelligence
A confident but incorrect response given by an artificial intelligence; a confabulation.
- Chatbots even forget that they are a bot and experience "hallucinations", Meta's description for when a bot confidently says something that is not true.
- Hallucinations are about adhering to the truth; when A.I. systems get confused, they have a bad habit of making things up rather than admitting their difficulties.
The neighborhood
- neighborAI slop
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for hallucination. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA