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Dreams

Dreams. REM sleep. REM stands for “rapid eye movement” REM sleep is a state of sleep in which brain activity is most like wakefulness. REM sleep.

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Dreams

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  1. Dreams

  2. REM sleep • REM stands for “rapid eye movement” • REM sleep is a state of sleep in which brain activity is most like wakefulness

  3. REM sleep • Eugene Aserinsky discovered REM sleep in 1953 while working in the lab of his PhD advisor. Aserinsky noticed that the sleepers' eyes fluttered beneath their closed eyelids. He later used a polygraph machine to record the sleeper’s brain waves during these periods. • Adult humans spend about a quarter of their sleep time in REM (approximately 90-120 minutes), much of it dreaming

  4. REM sleep • During a typical night, humans experience 4 or 5 periods of REM sleep (short periods at the beginning of the night and longer periods as the night progresses) • Amount of REM sleep varies with age- • a newborn baby typically spends more than 80% of total sleep time in REM

  5. Lucid Dreaming • Lucid dreaming occurs when dreamers realize that they are dreaming • Dreamers are sometimes capable of changing their dream environment and controlling various aspects of the dream. • The dream environment is often much more realistic in a lucid dream, and the senses heightened

  6. Lucid Dreaming • The realization that the dreamer is dreaming is usually triggered by the dreamer noticing some impossible or unlikely occurrence in the dream.

  7. Lucid Dreaming • Two types of lucid dreaming: • Dream-initiated: Starts off as a normal dream until they realize that they’re dreaming • Wake-initiated: The dreamer goes from a normal waking state directly into a dream state with no apparent lapse in consciousness • Time passage appears to be the same during lucid dreaming as when awake

  8. Lucid Dreaming-is it real? • There are “How to” books on lucid dreaming, websites focused on teaching people the “art and science” of lucid dreaming, advertisements stating- "Now instead of wasting up to Eight Hours Every Single Day with normal sleep, by mastering the art of lucid dreaming I am now able to enjoy truly mind blowing experiences every night!” (www.lucid-dreamer.info) • Lucid dreaming is very appealing to people and many try to learn how to become lucid dreamers and “control” their dreams

  9. Health issues • Dreams provide clues to the nature of more serious mental illness • Schizophrenics, for example, have poor-quality dreams, usually about objects rather than people • According to one study, "good dreamers," people who have vivid dreams with strong story lines, are less likely to be depressed • Dreaming is believed to be a “mental-health activity“

  10. Health Issues • It is thought that dreaming helps diffuse strong emotions. • However, no one has yet been able to say that REM sleep or dreaming are essential to life or even sanity

  11. What is the purpose of dreams? • The Ontogenetic Hypothesis of REM sleep states that this sleep phase is particularly important to the developing brain, possibly because it provides the neural stimulation that newborns need to form mature neural connections and for proper nervous system development. • Studies investigating the effects of Active Sleep deprivation have shown that deprivation early in life can result in behavioral problems, permanent sleep disruption, decreased brain mass, and result in an abnormal amount of neuronal cell death. • REM sleep is necessary for proper central nervous system development. Further supporting this theory is the fact that the amount of REM sleep decreases with age, as well as the data from other species

  12. What is the purpose of dreams? • Numerous studies have suggested that REM sleep is important for consolidation of procedural and spatial memories. • Freud proposed that dreams protect sleep, which might be disturbed by the arousal of unacceptable wishes • Ferenczi proposed that dreams may communicate something that is not being said outright(subconscious thoughts) • There have also been analogies made with the cleaning-up operations of computers when they are off-line. Dreams may remove parasitic nodes and other "junk" from the mind during sleep. • Dreams may also create new ideas through the generation of random thought mutations

  13. What is the purpose of dreams? • Dreams may also regulate mood. • Dreams are seen as projections of parts of the self that have been ignored, rejected, or suppressed • It is believed that people resolve issues in their sleep and use dreams to reorganize thoughts.

  14. What is the purpose of dreams? • Another idea is that dreams helps the mind prepare for potential disaster. For example, when new mothers dream about losing their babies, they may actually be rehearsing what they would do or how they would react if their worst fears were realized. • There's also evidence that dreaming helps certain kinds of learning. Some researchers have found that dreaming about physical tasks, like a gymnast's floor routine, enhances performance. Dreaming can also help people find solutions to elusive problems. "Anything that is very visual may get extra help from dreams," says Deirdre Barrett, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and editor of the journal Dreaming. • Barrett has found that even ordinary people can solve simple problems in their lives (like how to fit old furniture into a new apartment) if they focus on the dilemma before they fall asleep

  15. FACTS • Humans spend about 6 years dreaming • Dreams are generated in the forebrain • Most common emotion experienced during dreaming is anxiety • The U.S. ranks the highest amongst industrialized nations for aggression in dreams • 50% of U.S. males reporting aggression in dreams, compared to 32% of Dutch men

  16. FACTS • Men generally have more aggressive feelings in their dreams than women, and children's dreams do not have very much aggression until they reach teen age • In men's dreams 70% of the characters are other men, while a female's dreams contain an equal number of men and women.

  17. FACTS • Sexual dreams show up about 10% of the time and are more prevalent in young to mid-teens • Approximately 70% of women have recurring dreams and 65% of men • The most common themes are: situations relating to school, being chased, sexual experiences, falling, arriving too late, a person now alive being dead, flying, failing an examination, or a car accident • 12%of people dream only in black and white • In general, more introverted, psychologically oriented people naturally remember their dreams and practical, concrete thinkers don’t

  18. Children and Dreams • Almost the entire state of being before we're born is REM sleep • Children’s dreams begin to resemble adults around the age of 8 or 9. • Children dream about animals more often than adults and are more likely to report being victims than aggressors • Children are also more likely to have "fantastic" dreams, while adults' dreams tend to contain more elements of reality • A typical fantastic dream from a 10-year-old studied included a cat asking for directions to the "cat bathroom." Similarly, an 11-year-old boy dreamed that a snake wanted to go up a ski lift

  19. Examples of Dreams • All night long, Jared is drunk and talking in his incoherent mumbly monotone. Finally, I have enough and tell him off. I call him a boring bastard. Then I notice a baby girl standing inside a flaming fireplace. I go up to her and say sympathetically, "You must be very hot and uncomfortable." She agrees. I pick her up and I hold her, taking her away from the fire. (A Junior in High School) • “I was in school and at a play. There were three new boys. The oldest one gave me presents. They kept coming out of this box. There was a witch. She locked the old one in a cage. Suddenly there was a gust of wind. I struggled for the key and unlocked it. Then I went to some movie with the 5th grade. I went down to sit. Some people sat five rows behind us.” (A Fifth Grader) • Taken from dreambank.net

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