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Dr. Michael J. Breus

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Decoding the Science Behind Dream Interpretation and the Lucid Dream

Posted: 12/08/2012 9:50 am

Are you curious -- and sometimes maybe a bit baffled -- by your dreams? Do you wake up with fragments of a dream fresh in your mind and wonder: Why did I dream that? Well, you're not alone. Sleep scientists wonder the same thing. We know very little about how dreaming works in the brain, about why we dream, and what function dreaming may serve. Dreaming -- the mechanics of dreaming, and its purpose -- remains largely a mystery.

That's what makes this new study so fascinating. A research team led by scientists at the ATR Computational Neuroscience Laboratory in Kyoto, Japan has used brain scans to identify the visual imagery of dreams -- and garnered some new insight into the brain's activity during dreaming. Their research used a technique called neural decoding, which uses measurements of brain activity to predict visual content. By observing brain activity during sleep, researchers hoped to be able to identify the visual content of dreams.

The study involved three adult men, who slept while researchers monitored their brain activity using MRI and EEG. In order to connect brain activity with specific imagery during dreaming, researchers woke the men in the middle of sleep and asked them to describe what they'd been seeing in their dreams just before being awakened. After giving their descriptions, the men returned to sleep. The men were awakened to report on the contents of their dreams several times per hour. For each of the three volunteers, researchers compiled more than 200 dream reports over a period of several days. These dream reports revealed that the volunteers dreamed in large part about ordinary things related to daily life -- with the occasional detour into the odd or fantastical.

Researchers then divided the information from the dream reports into 20 categories representing basic visual images, including things like "car" and "computer," "male" and "female." After the sleep and dreaming phase of the study was complete, researchers showed the men a series of photographs that contained images representing the various categories created from their dream data. They conducted the same brain scans while the men were looking at the photographs, and compared these scans to the ones taken during sleep, paying particular attention to the areas of the brain responsible for processing visual information.

What did they find? That brain activity during dreaming is similar to the brain activity associated with processing visual information in a waking state. In simple terms, these results indicate that we "watch" our dreams in a manner similar to the way we perceive things visually while we're awake. The patterns of neural activity were so similar that researchers were able to look at the brain activity they observed during their volunteers' dreaming sleep and predict the visual content of their dreams with 75-80 percent accuracy.

This is some pretty cool stuff. Researchers plan to follow up this study with a similar investigation that looks specifically at dreaming during REM sleep, the stage of sleep when most of our dreaming -- and many of our most emotionally resonant dreams -- takes place.

Why does dream research matter? There is still so much we don't yet know about the purpose of sleep. Despite much scientific progress, the "why" of sleep remains a puzzle we have yet to solve. Dreaming is an ancient and universal aspect of the sleep experience. Research into animal sleep indicates that humans are not the only species to dream, but that animals have dream states similar to ours. Understanding the mechanisms of dreaming may lead to important insights into its purpose, and to the purpose of sleep itself. Are dreams related to the learning boost that sleep appears to provide? Does dreaming play a role in the consolidation of memory that occurs during sleep? What does dreaming have to do with the processing of emotional experiences? These are just some of the questions that science is asking about dreams.

Using dreams in scientific inquiry can also reveal important insight into the workings of the brain, as in the current study, or this in this research, which used dreaming to identify -- for the first time -- the networks of the brain that are active in moments of self-awareness. Researchers used a phenomenon called lucid dreaming to pinpoint the neural pathways that become active during moments of self-perception, a state known as meta-consciousness. People who experience lucid dreams retain a sense of self-consciousness even in the midst of dreaming. They are aware of the fact that they are dreaming and asleep. They can manipulate their dreams and even recall memories. In a normal dream state, this sense of self-awareness is suspended, as we become immersed in the temporary "reality" of our dream state. By comparing the brain activity of lucid dreamers to the brain activity of people in a normal dream state, researchers identified the neural pathways that activate to provide us with our conscious sense of self.

Dreams are fascinating, mysterious experiences to ponder. Decoding the science behind our dreams may lead us to an even deeper understanding of sleep, and of the mind itself.

Sweet Dreams,
Michael J. Breus, PhD
The Sleep Doctor™
www.thesleepdoctor.com

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Are you curious -- and sometimes maybe a bit baffled -- by your dreams? Do you wake up with fragments of a dream fresh in your mind and wonder: Why did I dream that? Well, you're not alone. Sleep scie...
Are you curious -- and sometimes maybe a bit baffled -- by your dreams? Do you wake up with fragments of a dream fresh in your mind and wonder: Why did I dream that? Well, you're not alone. Sleep scie...
 
 
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11:43 AM on 12/11/2012
i had a dream that people just made it all up ..........but i'm a scorpio and were a bit like that..........
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Todd G Chavey
08:15 AM on 12/11/2012
I met Christ twice in my dreams.
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lionstar
There is no 'try'.
11:37 PM on 12/10/2012
It is really deterministic to insist on connecting a dream's content with specific brain structures. In the courses I've taken on dreams, one of which related to C. Jung's philosophy, it became apparent that dreams have more than one cause. You can compare this to someone crying out in grief; many past losses contribute to the "cry", same as more than one experience shapes one particular dream or even dream symbol.
lincolnparkman
The man with a Plan!
04:19 AM on 12/10/2012
This is the funniest thing I have ever heard about dreaming - from comedian Norm Macdonald.

There maybe some insight, on association the brain is trying to reconcile, during sleep.. just an observation.

"You ever have a dream, and then you wake up right in the good part of the dream, and you're back in your stinking life again? You fall asleep; you try to re-dream it. Man, that never works. Always end up with some weird mutation of your original dream. Like, in the first dream, I was in a pool with Christie Brinkley, and we were swimming toward each other. Then, I woke up. So, I fell asleep again and ended up shooting pool with David Brinkley."

http://www.comedycentral.com/jokes/aouoq9/stand-up-norm-macdonald--norm-macdonald--trying-to-re-dream
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realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
05:24 AM on 12/09/2012
There's dreams, there's lucid dreaming, and then there's this drowsy lingering-of-consciousness, where the mind is playing and almost at happy-unconscious-time, but still hanging onto some shred of the day's business that it just. Won't. Let. Go. Of. Not quite insomnia, but not sleep, either. I've had it for years. Why won't it go away? The melatonin helps, staying up for another day also helps, but I wish I could get back to the point of head-on-pillow, lights OUT, good NIGHT, and dream or no, get those Z's.  Insomnia sucks.
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Ortist
09:45 PM on 12/12/2012
Me too. Well, we can always stay up all night posting to Huffington.
10:44 PM on 12/08/2012
THE OTHER NIGHT I DREAMT I WAS HUGGING JESSICA ALBA .

I DON'T NEED TO DECODE ANYTHING -- BUT I'D LOVE TO DO THAT AGAIN !
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Gary Lynne
08:07 PM on 12/08/2012
Perhaps you omnipotent healers and soothsayers should focus more on what someone is actually telling you rather than interpreting dreams. The example offered is that James Holmes told Dr. Lynne Fenton he was fantasizing and thinking about killing a lot of people. Wow how insightful of Dr. Fenton to not recognize her patient, who was in crisis after leaving his life dream behind, was now telling her about this particular fantasy. But then again perhaps she was focusing on helping him interpret pieces of things he remembered from nighttime dreams!!
01:30 PM on 12/09/2012
Who is claiming to be an omnipotent healer or soothsayer? What does dream exploration and analysis have to do with the tragedy to which you refer? If you have an axe to grind, find a hardware store, this is not the forum for it.