keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24871898/sleep-inducing-lucid-dreams
#41
COMMENT
Natasha Bray
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
July 2014: Nature Reviews. Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24474942/time-for-actions-in-lucid-dreams-effects-of-task-modality-length-and-complexity
#42
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Daniel Erlacher, Melanie Schädlich, Tadas Stumbrys, Michael Schredl
The relationship between time in dreams and real time has intrigued scientists for centuries. The question if actions in dreams take the same time as in wakefulness can be tested by using lucid dreams where the dreamer is able to mark time intervals with prearranged eye movements that can be objectively identified in EOG recordings. Previous research showed an equivalence of time for counting in lucid dreams and in wakefulness (LaBerge, 1985; Erlacher and Schredl, 2004), but Erlacher and Schredl (2004) found that performing squats required about 40% more time in lucid dreams than in the waking state...
2013: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24368900/dream-characteristics-in-a-brazilian-sample-an-online-survey-focusing-on-lucid-dreaming
#43
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sérgio A Mota-Rolim, Zé H Targino, Bryan C Souza, Wilfredo Blanco, John F Araujo, Sidarta Ribeiro
During sleep, humans experience the offline images and sensations that we call dreams, which are typically emotional and lacking in rational judgment of their bizarreness. However, during lucid dreaming (LD), subjects know that they are dreaming, and may control oneiric content. Dreaming and LD features have been studied in North Americans, Europeans and Asians, but not among Brazilians, the largest population in Latin America. Here we investigated dreams and LD characteristics in a Brazilian sample (n = 3,427; median age = 25 years) through an online survey...
2013: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24304774/minding-the-dream-self-perspectives-from-the-analysis-of-self-experience-in-dreams
#44
COMMENT
Jennifer Michelle Windt
Can ancient art of memory (AAOM) principles explain the function of dreaming? The analysis of self-experience in dreams suggests that the answer is no: The phenomenal dream self lacks certain dimensions that are crucial for the efficacy of AAOM in wakefulness. However, the comparison between dreams and AAOM may be fruitful by suggesting new perspectives for the study of lucid dreaming as well an altered perspective on the efficacy of AAOM itself.
December 2013: Behavioral and Brain Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24171230/lucid-dreaming-verified-by-volitional-communication-during-rem-sleep
#45
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S P La Berge, L E Nagel, W C Dement, V P Zarcone
The occurrence of lucid dreaming (dreaming while being conscious that one is dreaming) has been verified for 5 selected subjects who signaled that they knew they were dreaming while continuing to dream during unequivocal REM sleep. The signals consisted of particular dream actions having observable concomitants and were performed in accordance with pre-sleep agreement. The ability of proficient lucid dreamers to signal in this manner makes possible a new approach to dream research--such subjects, while lucid, could carry out diverse dream experiments marking the exact time of particular dream events, allowing derivation of of precise psychophysiological correlations and methodical testing of hypotheses...
June 1981: Perceptual and Motor Skills
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24021850/testing-the-involvement-of-the-prefrontal-cortex-in-lucid-dreaming-a-tdcs-study
#46
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Tadas Stumbrys, Daniel Erlacher, Michael Schredl
Recent studies suggest that lucid dreaming (awareness of dreaming while dreaming) might be associated with increased brain activity over frontal regions during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. By applying transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), we aimed to manipulate the activation of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) during REM sleep to increase dream lucidity. Nineteen participants spent three consecutive nights in a sleep laboratory. On the second and third nights they randomly received either 1 mA tDCS for 10 min or sham stimulation during each REM period starting with the second one...
December 2013: Consciousness and Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23964260/what-i-make-up-when-i-wake-up-anti-experience-views-and-narrative-fabrication-of-dreams
#47
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melanie G Rosen
I propose a narrative fabrication thesis of dream reports, according to which dream reports are often not accurate representations of experiences that occur during sleep. I begin with an overview of anti-experience theses of Norman Malcolm and Daniel Dennett who reject the received view of dreams, that dreams are experiences we have during sleep which are reported upon waking. Although rejection of the first claim of the received view, that dreams are experiences that occur during sleep, is implausible, I evaluate in more detail the second assumption of the received view, that dream reports are generally accurate...
2013: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23838126/neurobiology-and-clinical-implications-of-lucid-dreaming
#48
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sérgio A Mota-Rolim, John F Araujo
Several lines of evidence converge to the idea that rapid eye movement sleep (REMS) is a good model to foster our understanding of psychosis. Both REMS and psychosis course with internally generated perceptions and lack of rational judgment, which is attributed to a hyperlimbic activity along with hypofrontality. Interestingly, some individuals can become aware of dreaming during REMS, a particular experience known as lucid dreaming (LD), whose neurobiological basis is still controversial. Since the frontal lobe plays a role in self-consciousness, working memory and attention, here we hypothesize that LD is associated with increased frontal activity during REMS...
November 2013: Medical Hypotheses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23220345/measuring-consciousness-in-dreams-the-lucidity-and-consciousness-in-dreams-scale
#49
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ursula Voss, Karin Schermelleh-Engel, Jennifer Windt, Clemens Frenzel, Allan Hobson
In this article, we present results from an interdisciplinary research project aimed at assessing consciousness in dreams. For this purpose, we compared lucid dreams with normal non-lucid dreams from REM sleep. Both lucid and non-lucid dreams are an important contrast condition for theories of waking consciousness, giving valuable insights into the structure of conscious experience and its neural correlates during sleep. However, the precise differences between lucid and non-lucid dreams remain poorly understood...
March 2013: Consciousness and Cognition
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22754049/neural-correlates-of-dream-lucidity-obtained-from-contrasting-lucid-versus-non-lucid-rem-sleep-a-combined-eeg-fmri-case-study
#50
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martin Dresler, Renate Wehrle, Victor I Spoormaker, Stefan P Koch, Florian Holsboer, Axel Steiger, Hellmuth Obrig, Philipp G Sämann, Michael Czisch
STUDY OBJECTIVES: To investigate the neural correlates of lucid dreaming. DESIGN: Parallel EEG/fMRI recordings of night sleep. SETTING: Sleep laboratory and fMRI facilities. PARTICIPANTS: Four experienced lucid dreamers. INTERVENTIONS: N/A. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS: Out of 4 participants, one subject had 2 episodes of verified lucid REM sleep of sufficient length to be analyzed by fMRI...
July 1, 2012: Sleep
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22639960/lucid-dreaming-an-age-dependent-brain-dissociation
#51
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ursula Voss, Clemens Frenzel, Judith Koppehele-Gossel, Allan Hobson
The current study focused on the distribution of lucid dreams in school children and young adults. The survey was conducted on a large sample of students aged 6-19 years. Questions distinguished between past and current experience with lucid dreams. Results suggest that lucid dreaming is quite pronounced in young children, its incidence rate drops at about age 16 years. Increased lucidity was found in those attending higher level compared with lower level schools. Taking methodological issues into account, we feel confident to propose a link between the natural occurrence of lucid dreaming and brain maturation...
December 2012: Journal of Sleep Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22036177/dreamed-movement-elicits-activation-in-the-sensorimotor-cortex
#52
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Martin Dresler, Stefan P Koch, Renate Wehrle, Victor I Spoormaker, Florian Holsboer, Axel Steiger, Philipp G Sämann, Hellmuth Obrig, Michael Czisch
Since the discovery of the close association between rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and dreaming, much effort has been devoted to link physiological signatures of REM sleep to the contents of associated dreams [1-4]. Due to the impossibility of experimentally controlling spontaneous dream activity, however, a direct demonstration of dream contents by neuroimaging methods is lacking. By combining brain imaging with polysomnography and exploiting the state of "lucid dreaming," we show here that a predefined motor task performed during dreaming elicits neuronal activation in the sensorimotor cortex...
November 8, 2011: Current Biology: CB
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21906025/state-dissociation-human-behavior-and-consciousness
#53
REVIEW
Mark W Mahowald, Michel A Cramer Bornemann, Carlos H Schenck
Sleep is clearly not only a whole-brain or global phenomenon, but can also be a local phenomenon. This accounts for the fact that the primary states of being (wakefulness, NREM sleep, and REM sleep) are not necessarily mutually exclusive, and components of these states may appear in various combinations, with fascinating clinical consequences. Examples include: sleep inertia, narcolepsy, sleep paralysis, lucid dreaming, REM sleep behavior disorder, sleepwalking, sleep terrors, out-of-body experiences, and reports of alien abduction...
2011: Current Topics in Medicinal Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20870068/consciousness-in-dreams
#54
REVIEW
David Kahn, Tzivia Gover
This chapter argues that dreaming is an important state of consciousness and that it has many features that complement consciousness in the wake state. The chapter discusses consciousness in dreams and how it comes about. It discusses the changes that occur in the neuromodulatory environment and in the neuronal connectivity of the brain as we fall asleep and begin our night journeys. Dreams evolve from internal sources though the dream may look different than any one of these since something entirely new may emerge through self-organizing processes...
2010: International Review of Neurobiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20674815/-dreaming-is-a-hypnic-state-of-consciousness-getting-rid-of-the-goblot-hypothesis-and-its-modern-avatars
#55
JOURNAL ARTICLE
F Guénolé, A Nicolas
In the late nineteenth century, French logician Edmond Goblot first hypothesized that dreaming occurred at the moment of awakening only. Revisiting--more or less directly--Goblot's hypothesis, several contemporary authors have since renewed this unusual claim that oniric experience does not occur during sleep. So did some influential analytical philosophers (Wittgenstein, Malcolm, Dennett), with their typical formalism, and famous dream researcher Calvin Hall, who tried to provide experimental evidence for the Goblot's hypothesis...
August 2010: Clinical Neurophysiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19750924/lucid-dreaming-a-state-of-consciousness-with-features-of-both-waking-and-non-lucid-dreaming
#56
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ursula Voss, Romain Holzmann, Inka Tuin, J Allan Hobson
STUDY OBJECTIVES: The goal of the study was to seek physiological correlates of lucid dreaming. Lucid dreaming is a dissociated state with aspects of waking and dreaming combined in a way so as to suggest a specific alteration in brain physiology for which we now present preliminary but intriguing evidence. We show that the unusual combination of hallucinatory dream activity and wake-like reflective awareness and agentive control experienced in lucid dreams is paralleled by significant changes in electrophysiology...
September 2009: Sleep
https://read.qxmd.com/read/11143502/-neurological-interpretation-of-dreams
#57
REVIEW
J A Pareja, A Gil-Nagel
Cerebral cortical activity is constant throughout the entire human life, but substantially changes during the different phases of the sleep-wake cycle (wakefulness, non-REM sleep and REM sleep), as well as in relation to available information. In particular, perception of the environment is closely linked to the wake-state, while during sleep perception turns to the internal domain or endogenous cerebral activity. External and internal information are mutually exclusive. During wakefulness a neuronal mechanism allows attention to focus on the environment whereas endogenous cortical activity is ignored...
October 2000: Neurología: Publicación Oficial de la Sociedad Española de Neurología
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8873210/lucid-dreaming-and-the-mind-body-relationship-a-model-for-the-cognitive-and-physiological-variations-in-rapid-eye-movement-sleep
#58
REVIEW
A Lequerica
The psychophysiological properties of the lucid dream state were examined to evaluate the relationship between lucid and nonlucid dreaming, emphasizing the fact that the components of self-reflectiveness and other cognitive features commonly associated with lucid dreams occur in all dreams to various extents. Although lucid dreams are clearly toward one end of the continuum, they still share many of the characteristics present in most dreams. In this respect, exploration of lucid dreams may not necessarily be a misguided path toward the understanding of dreaming in general...
August 1996: Perceptual and Motor Skills
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8259083/a-possible-explanation-of-sudden-infant-death-syndrome-sids
#59
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G A Christos, J A Christos
Research into (lucid) dreaming has shown that the images of a dream are supported by the corresponding body actions, utilizing those muscles which remain active during dreaming. We suggest that Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) or Cot Death may be a result of an infant dreaming about its life as a fetus. In the course of that dream, since a fetus does not breathe in the usual sense, the infant may cease to breathe and die. Our hypothesis is consistent with the known facts about SIDS, including social factors such as sleeping position and climatic variation...
September 1993: Medical Hypotheses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7666822/infant-dreaming-and-fetal-memory-a-possible-explanation-of-sudden-infant-death-syndrome
#60
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G A Christos
During rapid-eye-movement sleep, when we dream, the brain is thought to be processing stored memory. The memory of a newborn infant is dominated by its fetal experience, and the infant is likely to dream about its life in the womb. Research with lucid (or conscious) dreaming has shown that dream images are supported by the corresponding body actions, using those muscles which remain active during rapid-eye-movement sleep. We suggest that sudden infant death syndrome or cot death may be a result of an infant dreaming about its life (or memory) as a fetus...
April 1995: Medical Hypotheses
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