0 to make someone believe something that is not real or true -- inandırmak, kandırmak, aldatma
[ often reflexive, + into + doing sth ] She deluded herself into thinking she could win.
Interestingly, the patients who were not currently deluded performed worse on the autobiographical incidents section of the task compared to those with active delusions.
The authors suggest this underlies impaired self-reflection in the persecutory deluded state.
Consequently, the deluded group may be more likely to make more confabulations generally, as their scripts are poorly represented in their cognitive architecture.
Yet even when there is a clear warning within a plot, we can be deluded by the operatic phenomenon as we experience opera live.
Some were deluded; they did not have cancer.
An image can delude us into thinking we know an object in a way a graph never can.
He played his tricks on women and children, in particular, and deluded them into spiritual crime.
In the subdivided deluded groups, both scriptrelevant and script-irrelevant groups showed a clear difference in the type of story needed to evoke atypical confabulations.