Transformations: Difference between revisions

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'''Transformations''' can be described as visual metamorphosis of specific parts of one's external environment into other concepts. For example, people who undergo this effect will often report seeing parts of the environment shifting into completely different objects with a huge variety in potential artistic styles and differing degrees in terms of the quality of their detail, realism and animation.  
'''Transformations''' can be described as the experience of a visual metamorphosis of specific parts of one's external environment into other concepts. For example, people who undergo this effect will often report seeing parts of the environment shifting into completely different objects with a huge variety in potential artistic styles and differing degrees in terms of the quality of their detail, realism and animation.  


These hallucinations are progressive in nature, which means they form by arising from patterns or objects and then, over a period of seconds, by drifting, smoothing or locking through a liquid process of self-transformation into an entirely new appearance of still or animated objects, people, animals, concepts, places or anything one could possibly imagine. This is greatly enhanced and fueled by the separate visual effect of [[pattern recognition enhancement]], causing vague stimuli (which already look somewhat like abstract concepts due to an inbuilt sense of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia pareidolia]) to transform into extremely detailed versions of what they were already perceived as looking similar to.  
These hallucinations are progressive in nature, which means they form by arising from patterns or objects and then, over a period of seconds, by drifting, smoothing or locking through a liquid process of self-transformation into an entirely new appearance of still or animated objects, people, animals, concepts, places or anything one could possibly imagine. This is greatly enhanced and fueled by the separate visual effect of [[pattern recognition enhancement]], causing vague stimuli (which already look somewhat like abstract concepts due to an inbuilt sense of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareidolia pareidolia]) to transform into extremely detailed versions of what they were already perceived as looking similar to.