Autonomous voice communication
Autonomous voice communication is the experience of hearing and engaging in conversation with one or more internal voices that feel genuinely independent from one's own thoughts — capable of expressing novel ideas, holding opinions the person does not share, and carrying on complex dialogue that feels unscripted and spontaneous.
Description
Autonomous voice communication refers to the perception of distinct, seemingly self-directed voices within one's own consciousness that are capable of carrying on coherent, complex, and often surprisingly intelligent conversation. Unlike simple auditory hallucinations (hearing sounds or snippets of speech), this effect involves a sustained communicative entity that can respond to questions, offer unsolicited commentary, express its own apparent opinions and emotions, and engage in extended dialogue that feels genuinely bidirectional rather than self-generated.
The experience unfolds across a spectrum of intensity. At the lowest levels, there is simply a sense of presence — a feeling that another consciousness is nearby and attentive, even if it has not spoken. At the next level, the person may experience what feels likeshared internal responses — thoughts that arise in answer to their questions but that feel as if they originated from something other than their own mind. At moderate intensity, adistinct voice emerges, with its own apparent personality, tone, vocabulary, and perspective. At the highest levels, the voice achieves a degree ofapparent autonomy that is genuinely startling — it may say things the person finds surprising, disagreeable, or beyond what they believe themselves capable of articulating.
The philosophical and psychological significance of this effect is considerable. Users frequently report that the communicating entity conveys information that feels genuinely novel — insights, perspectives, or knowledge that the person does not believe they possess consciously. Whether this represents access to unconscious knowledge, creative recombination of existing mental content, or something else entirely remains a matter of active debate. The experience is often profoundly meaningful to those who encounter it, and it features prominently in the literature on DMT entities, psilocybin mystical experiences, and dissociative "hole" states.
Autonomous voice communication is most commonly produced by moderate to heavy doses of psychedelics (especially DMT and psilocybin),dissociatives (particularly ketamine at k-hole depths), anddeliriants. It can also emerge duringmeditation, states of sensory deprivation, and prolonged sleep deprivation. The effect should be distinguished from the auditory verbal hallucinations characteristic of schizophrenia — substance-induced autonomous voices are typically transient, occur in the context of known substance use, and resolve completely as the substance wears off.
Harm reduction note: While most people find autonomous voice communication fascinating or meaningful, the experience can be distressing if the voice expresses hostile, threatening, or deeply disturbing content. If this occurs, remember that the voice is a product of your own mind operating under unusual conditions and does not represent an external entity with power over you. The experience is temporary. If autonomous voice phenomena persist after the substance has worn off, this warrants professional evaluation.
Intensity Levels
A sensed presence of the other
20%At the lowest level, there is a distinctive feeling that another form of consciousness is internally present alongside that of one's usual sense of self. This sensation is often referred to within the scientific literature as a sense of presence.
Mutually generated internal responses
40%Internally felt conversational responses to one's own thoughts and feelings which feel as if they are partially generated by one's own thought stream and in equal measure by that of a separate thought stream.
Separately generated internal responses
60%Internally felt conversational responses to one's own thoughts and feelings which feel as if they are generated by an entirely distinct and separate thought stream that resides within one's head.
Separately generated audible internal responses
80%Internally heard conversational responses to one's own thoughts and feelings which are perceived as a clearly defined and audible voice within one's head. These can take on a variety of voices, accents, and dialects, but usually sound identical to one's own spoken voice.
Separately generated audible external responses
100%Externally heard conversational responses to one's own thoughts and feelings which are perceived as a clearly defined and audible voice which sounds as if it is coming from outside one's own head. These can take on a variety of voices, accents, and dialects, but usually sound identical to the person's own spoken voice.