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Dreaming While We're Awake

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Dreaming While We're Awake
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Traditionally, science has drawn a sharp dividing line between sleep and wakeful consciousness. Research shows that this sharp boundary may need revision.

Recent research suggests that mental content across states of consciousness is quite similar. Source: Alexey Demidov/Pexels In order to study something, we first need to be able to define what it is, and a classic question in psychology has to do with the definition of consciousness.

Most people think of consciousness as awareness of the world around us, drawing a sharp dividing line between consciousness and unconsciousness . However, it appears that this sharp and clear dividing line between sleep and wakeful consciousness is not all that sharp after all. Psychology might define consciousness as a “function of the human mind that receives and processes information” via our sensory systems and the reasoning ability of our minds.

We then “store it or reject it” using our. Neurobiologically, consciousness is defined as a “spectrum of states that range from physiological states to states of impaired consciousness. ” These mental states can be modified “either by self-training or by drug intake” . In the lab, these two states of consciousness can be monitored and distinguished by patterns of brain activity visible in an EEG.

Wakeful consciousness is relatively easy to describe. We see, hear, touch, taste, and feel the world around us , send that sensory information to our brain to be sorted and combined with other events, and if it matters to us, stored.

If it doesn’t matter, it gets tossed out.cognitive systems that usually run in the background are functioning at a reduced level and tend to produce “misrepresentations such as hallucination, delusions, and memory distortions….such generally misrepresentational, temporary and reversible states areNREM sleep deepens as we fall asleep, with the EEG showing a characteristic slow wave, high amplitude pattern. REM sleep is characterized by an EEG that looks similar to the awake pattern , even though we’re deeply asleep.

REM sleep is characterized by what most people think of as dreams. There are two basic phases of sleep, each identifiable by changes in the EEG. The traditional model of sleep holds that we cycle through first what is known as Non-Rapid Eye Movement Sleep or NREM sleep, which has three sub-stages, N1 through N3. In each stage, we fall more deeply asleep and are harder to wake.

If you awaken the sleeper during NREM sleep, they will typically tell you they were not dreaming, or at least not having the same kind of dreams we usually think of when we think of dreaming. They might tell you they had a sudden, short-lived flash of a scene that was low in intensity and. REM sleep dreams are vivid, intense, have a storyline, are elaborate, and are often bizarre and emotional .

Recent research suggests the traditional model of sleep might need updating. Decat, Le Coz, Senechal, et al. found that dream states can and do happen when we’re awake and conscious, with no sharp, clear difference between our thinking when we’re awake and when we’re asleep. Decat and his colleagues wanted to assess consciousness during the transition period between wakefulness and actual sleep .

They recorded EEGs, and, in condition 1, asked participants to hold onto a bottle as they rested in a chair. As they relaxed, entering stages N1 and N2, their muscles relaxed, allowing the bottle to fall to the floor, awakening the participant. In condition 2, their rest was interrupted irregularly by an auditory alarm. At each “probe,” participants were asked, “What crossed your mind in the last 10 seconds before the interruption?

” They then rated their thoughts on a six-point scale along four dimensions: the spontaneity, bizarreness, and fluidity of those thoughts and how “awake” they perceived themselves to be. Using a statistical technique called Principal Component Analysis, the researchers were able to identify four distinct types of mental experiences or content during the transition between sleep and wakefulness.

These four experiences were fragmented content – one participant recalled a brief image of his father crossing the street, alert content—the participant reported listening to the sounds in the room around him, bizarre content, like seeing mini-aliens, and deliberate content, like thinking about what was on the schedule for tomorrow. Finally, using the EEG recordings of the 10 seconds just before each probe, they identified content-specific neural signatures of each type of content and whether participants were awake or in stages N1 or N2.between wakefulness and sleep.

In fact, each of the four content types occurred during wakefulness, at the beginning of sleep , and during light sleep . One participant reported “ants crawling on me with crossword puzzles in the background” while awake and in N1, and another reported “thinking about work” while in N2 . Participants were as likely to have a bizarre, dream-like thought while awake as they were to have a mundane dream about everyday life when asleep.

BTW: Thomas Edison used the bottle dropping technique to wake himself from naps. He maintained that he did his best work in this transition period between wakefulness and sleep. Lots of people seem to agree with him. If you’d like to explore your ownDecat, N., Le Coz, A., Senechal, J., Scellier-Dekens, I., de Verville, H., Herzog, R., Lejeune, F.X.

, Arnulf, I., Andrillon, T., and Oudiette, D. . Dream-like mental states can occur during wakefulness. Lacaux, C., Andrillon, T., Bastoul, C., Idir, Y., Fonteix-Galet, A., Arnulf, I., and Oudiette, D. . Sleep onset is a creative sweet spot.

Barbara Blatchley, Ph. D., is a professor of psychology and neuroscience at Agnes Scott College in Georgia. She researches sensory system development and perceptual processing. Self Tests are all about you.

Are you outgoing or introverted? Are you a narcissist? Does perfectionism hold you back? Find out the answers to these questions and more with Psychology Today.

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