
New research suggests that hearing voices in schizophrenia may arise from the brain’s failure to recognize its own inner speech.
A team of psychologists at UNSW Sydney has uncovered the most compelling evidence so far that hearing voices in schizophrenia may result from the brain’s inability to recognize its own internal speech.
Published in the journal Schizophrenia Bulletin, the study suggests this discovery could help identify biological clues linked to schizophrenia. This is a crucial development, as there are currently no blood tests, brain scans, or laboratory-based biomarkers (physical indicators that reflect a person’s health) that are specific to the condition.
Professor Thomas Whitford from the UNSW School of Psychology has long investigated how inner speech influences thinking in both healthy individuals and those living with schizophrenia spectrum disorders.
“Inner speech is the voice in your head that silently narrates your thoughts – what you’re doing, planning, or noticing,” he says.
“Most people experience inner speech regularly, often without realizing it, though there are some who don’t experience it at all.
“Our research shows that when we speak – even just in our heads – the part of the brain that processes sounds from the outside world becomes less active. This is because the brain predicts the sound of our own voice. But in people who hear voices, this prediction seems to go wrong, and the brain reacts as if the voice is coming from someone else.”
Brainwave analysis
Prof. Whitford says this confirms what mental health researchers have long theorized: that auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia may be due to the person’s own inner speech being misattributed as external speech.
“This idea’s been around for 50 years, but it’s been very difficult to test because inner speech is inherently private,” he says.
“How do you measure it? One way is by using an EEG, which records the brain’s electrical activity. Even though we can’t hear inner speech, the brain still reacts to it – and in healthy people, using inner speech produces the same kind of reduction in brain activity as when they speak out loud.
“But in people who hear voices, that reduction of activity doesn’t happen. In fact, their brains react even more strongly to inner speech, as if it’s coming from someone else. That might help explain why the voices feel so real.”
Sound choices
The researchers divided participants into three groups. The first group included 55 people living with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders who had experienced auditory verbal hallucinations (AVH) in the past week. The second group of 44 participants also had schizophrenia, but either had no history of AVH or hadn’t experienced them recently. The third group was a control group of 43 healthy people with no history of schizophrenia.
Each participant was connected to an EEG (electroencephalography) device to measure brainwaves as they listened to audio over headphones. They were asked to imagine saying either ‘bah’ or ‘bih’ in their minds at the exact moment they heard recordings of one of those two sounds played through headphones. The participants had no way of knowing whether the sound they heard in the headphones would match the sound they made in their imagination.
In the healthy participants, when the sound that played in the headphones matched the syllable they imagined saying in their minds, the EEG showed reduced activity in the auditory cortex – the part of the brain that processes sound and speech. This suggests the brain was predicting the sound and dampening its response – similar to what happens when we speak out loud.
However, in the group of participants who had recently experienced AVH, the results were the reverse. In these individuals, instead of the expected suppression of brain activity when the imagined speech matched the sound heard, the EEG showed an enhanced response.
“Their brains reacted more strongly to inner speech that matched the external sound, which was the exact opposite of what we found in the healthy participants,” Prof. Whitford says.
“This reversal of the normal suppression effect suggests that the brain’s prediction mechanism may be disrupted in people currently experiencing auditory hallucinations, which may cause their own inner voice to be misinterpreted as external speech.”
Participants in the second group – people with a schizophrenia-spectrum disorder who hadn’t experienced AVH recently or at all – showed a pattern that was intermediate between the healthy participants and the hallucinating participants.
What this means
The researchers say this is the strongest confirmation to date that the brains of people living with schizophrenia are misperceiving imagined speech as speech that is produced externally.
“It was always a plausible theory – that people were hearing their own thoughts spoken out loud – but this new approach has provided the strongest and most direct test of this theory to date,” Prof. Whitford says.
He says the next thing he and his fellow researchers want to assess is if this measure can be used to predict who might transition to psychosis, with the potential to identify people with high risk of developing psychosis, which would allow for early intervention.
“This sort of measure has great potential to be a biomarker for the development of psychosis,” Prof. Whitford says.
“Ultimately, I think that understanding the biological causes of the symptoms of schizophrenia is a necessary first step if we hope to develop new and effective treatments.”
Reference: “Corollary Discharge Dysfunction to Inner Speech and its Relationship to Auditory Verbal Hallucinations in Patients with Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders” by Thomas J Whitford, Lawrence Kin-hei Chung, Oren Griffiths, Bradley N Jack, Mike E Le Pelley, Kevin M Spencer, Ana R Barreiros, Anthony W Harrison, Nathan T Han, Sol Libesman, Daniel Pearson, Ruth B Elijah, Marianthe Godwin, Carla Haroutonian, Angela Nickerson, Sandra Sau-man Chan, George Heung-chuen Chong, Gary Kar-wai Lau, Yip-chau Wong, Jason Wai-yiu Wong, Judith M Ford, Daniel H Mathalon, Anthony W F Harris and Suzanne Ho-wai So, 21 October 2025, Schizophrenia Bulletin.
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbaf167
Funding: National Health and Medical Research Council, Australian Research Council, Australian Government Research Training Program, Daniel Beck Memorial Award for Schizophrenia Research, U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Direct Grant, The Chinese University of Hong Kong Postdoctoral Fellowship Scheme, Research Grant Council General Research Fund
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3 Comments
What language does my brain use for its inner speech?
Schizophrenia has severe symptoms. A diagnosis of schizophrenia requires that at least two of the symptoms below be present during a significant portion of a one-month period:
delusions (false beliefs such as conspiracies, mind control, or persecution);
hallucinations (usually voices criticizing or commenting on the person’s behavior);
disorganized speech (incomprehensible or difficult to understand);
grossly disorganized or catatonic behavior; and
negative symptoms such as flat emotions, lack of facial expressions, and inattention to basic self-care needs such as bathing and eating.5
Information about Mental Illness and the Brain – NIH Curriculum Supplement Series – NCBI Bookshelf
All of these symptoms are visible in victims of torture and have nothing to do with mental illness!
You must have access to the internet in order to post this comment, so just go to a law enforcement agency website and tell them what is happening. Posting about your situation in the comments of an article about schizophrenia just makes it look like you do have schizophrenia and you are not in trouble and just need to take your meds. Good luck to you, whatever your case may be.