Alice in Wonderland syndrome is a neurological condition that affects perception where objects appear smaller, larger, closer or farther away than they actually are. However, the patient remains lucid and can easily distinguish real objects from imagined ones, even when the patient is also hallucinating. It is usually temporary and can be caused by migraines, brain tumors or hallucinogenic drugs. It is fairly common during childhood, and can often appear spontaneously at the onset of sleep. It becomes much rarer in people over the age of 30.
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