This article suggests how brain mechanisms of learning,
attention, and volition may give rise to hallucinations
during schizophrenia and other mental disorders. The article
suggests that normal learning and memory are stabilized
through the use of learned top-down expectations. These
expectations learn prototypes that are capable of focusing
attention upon the combinations of features that comprise
conscious perceptual experiences. When top-down expectations
are active in a priming situation, they can modulate or
sensitize their target cells to respond more effectively
to matched bottom-up information. They cannot, however,
fully activate these target cells. These matching properties
are shown to be essential towards stabilizing the memory
of learned representations. The modulatory property of
top-down expectations is achieved through a balance between
top-down excitation and inhibition. The learned prototype
is the excitatory on-center in this top-down network. Phasic
volitional signals can shift the balance between excitation
and inhibition to favor net excitatory activation. Such
a volitionally mediated shift enables top-down expectations,
in the absence of supportive bottom-up inputs, to cause
conscious experiences of imagery and inner speech and thereby
to enable fantasy and planning activities to occur. If
these volitional signals become tonically hyperactive during
a mental disorder, the top-down expectations can give rise
to conscious experiences in the absence of bottom-up inputs
and volition. These events are compared with data about
hallucinations. The article predicts where these top-down
expectations and volitional signals may act in the laminar
circuits of visual cortex and, by extension, in other sensory
and cognitive neocortical areas, and how the level of abstractness
of learned prototypes may covary with the abstractness
of hallucinatory content. A similar breakdown of volition
may lead to delusions of control in the motor system. (JINS,
2000, 6, 583–592.)