Pseudoseizures, also known as psychogenic seizures, can mimic epileptic seizures, but the symptomatology is significantly different from epileptic seizures. The absence of epileptiform discharges does not necessarily rule out epilepsy, and it is true that some epilepsies in deep brain regions sometimes fail to record interictal discharges and ictal discharges. At this point, a solid background in symptomatology analysis can help the physician identify pseudoseizures. Seizures are often a combination of several symptoms in a temporal evolutionary order, and this temporal evolution of symptoms corresponds to the order of diffusion of discharges in the spatial structure of brain regions, not in a random order, but in a rule-based manner. Once the sequence of seizures does not correspond to a temporal and spatial pattern, then it is important to suspect if it is a pseudoseizure.