Sweet Dreams: Understanding your private dream world
Top five most common dreams for teenagers (boys/girls):
1. Being attacked or chased-78%/83% 2. Sexual experiences-85%/73% 3. Falling-73%/74% 4. School, teachers-57%/71% 5. Arriving too late-55%/62%
The 12 “universal dreams:” http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/03341/248376.stm
How much time do we spend in our own private dream world?
Dreams are “hallucinations of the sleeping mind.”
Non-REM sleep and dreams
We also dream during non-REM stages
The content of dreams Primarily visual; 25% include auditory sensations, 20%
involve bodily sensations For young men, 1 in 10 dreams are sexual, for young
women, 1 in 30! Less than 1% of dreams involve tastes or smells People usually dream in color, but it’s often drab and murky,
not vivid and colorful The dreamer plays an active role in 75% of his/her dreams;
absent in only 10% Half of characters are people we know; the other half usually
are not! 67% of characters in men’s dreams are men
The emotions of dreams Many dreams have a
negative tone or a mixture of positive and negative
Explanation:
Day residue The content of dreams is often
similar to events in your waking life.
Stimulus incorporation Stimuli that occur
during sleep can be incorporated into dreams either directly or in altered form.
Can we learn while we sleep? No. We forget everything
five minutes before we fall asleep, and do not remember anything played when we are in deep sleep.
So… What is the function of dreams?
What are dreams for?
#1: To satisfy our own wishes? Sigmund Freud--The
Interpretation of Dreams (1900) Dreams are “the royal road
to the unconscious,” a “psychic safety valve” for the id’s energy
Freud’s two levels Manifest Content
Remembered story line of the dream
Latent Content Underlying hidden
meaning, buried in symbols (dream censorship)
Freud’s brightest student: Carl Jung Dreams are the key to our
collective unconscious: our shared human memory
#2: To file away memories and to develop and preserve neural pathways? Dreams help sift, sort, and fix the day’s experiences in
our memories, getting rid of useless connections, clearing space for new information
#3: To make sense of neural static?
Hobson and McCarley: Activation synthesis theory The pons dispenses random bursts of electricity during
REM, and dreams are your cortex’s attempt to make sense of it.
The emotional limbic system also turns on, making dreams highly emotional
The frontal lobes shut down; dreams are therefore less inhibited and logical than we normally are
#4: To solve problems?
Rosalind Cartwright Dreams are the brain’s way of working things out; they
exist to help us They help us get over life-changing events, maintain our
sense of identity, keep our emotions in check, because we’re too busy during the way to figure it all out.
What do you think? That’s what we will
find out over the next two days of our “Dream Team” activity!
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