Dictionary Definition
dreamlike adj : resembling a dream; "night
invested the lake with a dreamlike quality"; "as irrational and
surreal as a dream" [syn: surreal]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
from dream + -likeAdjective
- like something from a dream; having a sense of vagueness, insubstantiality, or
incongruousness
- Her kiss sent me into a dreamlike state of bliss, and while we must have spent the next several hours wandering the fairgrounds together, I can hardly remember anything after that.
Extensive Definition
Dreams are the images, thoughts and feelings
experienced while asleep, particularly
strongly associated with rapid
eye movement sleep. The contents and biological purposes of
dreams are not fully understood, though they have been a topic of
speculation and interest throughout recorded history. The
scientific study of dreams is known as oneirology.
Neurology of sleep and dreams
There is no universally agreed biological definition of dreaming. General observation shows that dreams are strongly associated with rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, during which an electroencephalogram shows brain activity to be most like wakefulness. Participant-nonremembered dreams during non-REM sleep are normally more mundane in comparison. During a typical lifespan, a human spends a total of about six years dreaming (which is about 2 hours each night). It is unknown where in the brain dreams originate, if there is a single origin for dreams or if multiple portions of the brain are involved, or what the purpose of dreaming is for the body or mind.During REM sleep, the release of certain
neurotransmitters is completely suppressed. As a result, motor
neurons are not stimulated, a condition known as REM atonia.
This prevents dreams from resulting in dangerous movements of the
body.
Discovery of REM
In 1953 Eugene
Aserinsky discovered REM
sleep while working in the surgery of his PhD
advisor. Aserinsky noticed that the sleepers' eyes fluttered
beneath their closed eyelids, later using a polygraph machine to record
their brain
waves during these periods. In one session he awakened a
subject who was crying and wailing out during REM and confirmed his
suspicion that dreaming was occurring. In 1953 Aserinsky and his
advisor published the ground-breaking study in Science.
Dream theories
Activation-synthesis
In 1976, J. Allan Hobson and Robert McCarley proposed a new theory that changed dream research, challenging the previously held Freudian view of dreams as unconscious wishes to be interpreted. The activation synthesis theory asserts that the sensory experiences are fabricated by the cortex as a means of interpreting chaotic signals from the pons. They propose that in REM sleep, the ascending cholinergic PGO (ponto-geniculo-occipital) waves stimulate higher midbrain and forebrain cortical structures, producing rapid eye movements. The activated forebrain then synthesizes the dream out of this internally generated information. They assume that the same structures that induce REM sleep also generate sensory information.Hobson and McCarly's 1976 research suggested that
the signals interpreted as dreams originated in the brain stem
during REM sleep. However, research by Mark Solms suggests that
dreams are generated in the forebrain, and that REM sleep
and dreaming are not directly related. While working in the
neurosurgery department at hospitals in Johannesburg
and London,
Solms had access to patients with various brain injuries. He began
to question patients about their dreams and confirmed that patients
with damage to the parietal
lobe stopped dreaming; this finding was in line with Hobson's
1977 theory. However, Solms did not encounter cases of loss of
dreaming with patients having brain stem damage. This observation
forced him to question Hobson's prevailing theory which marked the
brain stem as the source of the signals interpreted as dreams.
Solms viewed the idea of dreaming as a function of many complex
brain structures as validating Freudian dream theory, an idea that
drew criticism from Hobson.
Continual-activation
Combining Hobson's activation synthesis hypothesis with Solms's findings, the continual-activation theory of dreaming presented by Jie Zhang proposes that dreaming is a result of brain activation and synthesis; at the same time, dreaming and REM sleep are controlled by different brain mechanisms. Zhang hypothesizes that the function of sleep is to process, encode, and transfer the data from the temporary memory to the long-term memory, though there is not much evidence backing up this so-called "consolidation." Non-REM sleep processes the conscious-related memory (declarative memory), and REM sleep processes the unconscious related memory (procedural memory).Zhang assumes that during REM sleep, the
unconscious part of a brain is busy processing the procedural
memory; meanwhile, the level of activation in the conscious part of
the brain will descend to a very low level as the inputs from the
sensory are basically disconnected. This will trigger the
"continual-activation" mechanism to generate a data stream from the
memory stores to flow through the conscious part of the brain.
Zhang suggests that this pulse-like brain activation is the inducer
of each dream. He proposes that, with the involvement of the brain
associative thinking system, dreaming is, thereafter,
self-maintained with the dreamer's own thinking until the next
pulse of memory insertion. This explains why dreams have both
characteristics of continuity (within a dream) and sudden changes
(between two or more dreams).
Dreams and memory
Eugen Tarnow suggests that dreams are ever-present excitations of long-term memory, even during waking life. The strangeness of dreams is due to the format of long-term memory, reminiscent of Penfield & Rasmussen’s findings that electrical excitations of the cortex give rise to experiences similar to dreams. During waking life an executive function interprets long term memory consistent with reality checking. Tarnow's theory is a reworking of Freud's theory of dreams in which Freud's unconscious is replaced with the long-term memory system and Freud's “Dream Work” describes the structure of long-term memory.Hippocampus and memory
A 2001 study showed evidence that illogical
locations, characters, and dream flow may help the brain strengthen
the linking and consolidation of semantic
memories. These conditions may occur because, during REM sleep,
the flow of information between the hippocampus and neocortex is reduced.
Increasing levels of the stress
hormone cortisol late
in sleep (often during REM sleep) cause this decreased
communication. One stage of memory
consolidation is the linking of distant but related memories.
Payne and Nadel hypothesize that these memories are then
consolidated into a smooth narrative, similar to a process that
happens when memories are created under stress.
Functional hypotheses
There are many hypotheses about the function of
dreams, including:
- During the night there may be many external stimuli bombarding the senses, but the mind interprets the stimulus and makes it a part of a dream in order to ensure continued sleep. The mind will, however, awaken an individual if they are in danger or if trained to respond to certain sounds, such as a baby crying.
- Dreams allow the repressed parts of the mind to be satisfied through fantasy while keeping the conscious mind from thoughts that would suddenly cause one to awaken from shock.
- Freud suggested that bad dreams let the brain learn to gain control over emotions resulting from distressing experiences.
- Ferenczi proposed that the dream, when told, may communicate something that is not being said outright.
- Dreams are like the cleaning-up operations of computers when they are off-line, removing parasitic nodes and other "junk" from the mind during sleep.
- Dreams create new ideas through the generation of random thought mutations. Some of these may be rejected by the mind as useless, while others may be seen as valuable and retained. Blechner calls this the theory of "Oneiric Darwinism."
- Dreams regulate mood.
- Hartmann says dreams may function like psychotherapy, by "making connections in a safe place" and allowing the dreamer to integrate thoughts that may be dissociated during waking life.
- More recent research by Griffin has led to the formulation of the 'expectation fulfillment theory of dreaming', which suggests that dreaming metaphorically completes patterns of emotional expectation and lowers stress levels.
- Coutts hypothesizes that dreams modify and test mental schemas during sleep during a process he calls emotional selection, and that only schema modifications that appear emotionally adaptive during dream tests are selected for retention, while those that appear maladaptive are abandoned or further modified and tested.
Dreams and psychosis
A number of thinkers have commented on the
similarities between the phenomenology of dreams
and that of psychosis.
These include thought disorder, flattened or inappropriate affect
(emotion), and hallucination. Among
philosophers, Kant, for example,
wrote that ‘the lunatic is a wakeful dreamer’. Schopenhauer
said: ‘A dream is a short-lasting psychosis, and a psychosis is a
long-lasting dream.’In the field of psychoanalysis, Freud wrote: ‘A dream
then, is a psychosis’,and Jung: ‘Let the dreamer
walk about and act like one awakened and we have the clinical
picture of dementia praecox.’
McCreery has sought to explain these similarities
by reference to the fact, documented by Oswald, that sleep can
supervene as a reaction to extreme stress and hyper-arousal. McCreery adduces
evidence that psychotics are people with a tendency to
hyper-arousal, and suggests that this renders them prone to what
Oswald calls ‘micro-sleeps’ during waking life. He points in
particular to the paradoxical finding of Stevens and Darbyshire
that patients suffering from catatonia can be roused from
their seeming stupor by the administration of sedatives rather than
stimulants.
Cultural history
Dreams have a long history both as a subject of
conjecture and as a source of inspiration. Throughout their
history, people have sought meaning
in dreams or divination through
dreams. They have been described physiologically as a response
to neural processes during sleep, psychologically as
reflections of the subconscious, and spiritually as messages
from God or
predictions of the future. Many cultures practiced dream
incubation, with the intention of cultivating dreams that were
prophetic or contained
messages from the divine.
Judaism has a
traditional ceremony that is to follow particularly disturbing
dreams.
Dream content
From the 1940s to 1985, Calvin S. Hall collected more than 50,000 dream reports at Western Reserve University. In 1966 Hall and Van De Castle published The Content Analysis of Dreams in which they outlined a coding system to study 1,000 dream reports from college students. It was found that people all over the world dream of mostly the same things. Hall's complete dream reports became publicly available in the mid-1990s by Hall's protégé William Domhoff, allowing further different analysis.Personal experiences from the last day or week
are frequently incorporated into dreams. In some cases, sexual
dreams may result in orgasm or nocturnal
emission. These are commonly known as wet
dreams.
Recurring dreams
While the content of most dreams is dreamt only
once, many people experience recurring dreams—that is, the same
dream narrative is experienced over different occasions of sleep.
Up to 70% of females and 65% of males report recurrent
dreams.
Common themes
Content-analysis studies have identified common reported themes in dreams. These include: situations relating to school, being chased, running slowly in place, sexual experiences, falling, arriving too late, a person now alive being dead, teeth falling out, flying, embarrassing moments, failing an examination, not being able to move, not being able to focus vision and car accidents. Twelve percent of people dream only in black and white.Relationship with mental illness
There is evidence that certain medical conditions
(normally only neurological conditions) can impact dreams. For
instance, people with synesthesia have never
reported black-and-white dreaming, and often have a difficult time
imagining the idea of dreaming in only black and white.
Therapy for recurring nightmares (often
associated with
posttraumatic stress disorder can include imagining alternative
scenarios that could begin at each step of the dream.
In modern times, both Sigmund
Freud and Carl Jung
identified dreams as an interaction between the unconscious
and the conscious.
They also assert together that the unconscious is the dominant
force of the dream, and in dreams it conveys its own mental
activity to the perceptive faculty. While Freud felt that there was
an active censorship against the unconscious even during sleep,
Jung argued that the dream's bizarre quality is an efficient
language, comparable to poetry and uniquely capable of revealing
the underlying meaning.
Fritz Perls
presented his theory of dreams as part of the holistic nature of
Gestalt
therapy. Dreams are seen as projections of parts of the self
that have been ignored, rejected, or suppressed.
Jung argued that one could consider every person in the dream to
represent an aspect of the dreamer, which he called the subjective
approach to dreams. Perls
expanded this point of view to say that even inanimate objects in
the dream may represent aspects of the dreamer. The dreamer may
therefore be asked to imagine being an object in the dream and to
describe it, in order to bring into awareness the characteristics
of the object that correspond with the dreamer's personality.
Other associated phenomena
Lucid dreaming
Lucid dreaming is the conscious perception of one's state while dreaming. In this state a person usually has control over characters and the environment of the dream as well as the dreamer's own actions within the dream. The occurrence of lucid dreaming has been scientifically verified."Oneironaut" is a term sometimes used for those
who explore the world of dreams. For example, dream researcher
Stephen LaBerge uses the term. It is often associated with lucid
dreaming in particular.
Dreams of absent-minded transgression
Dreams of absent-minded transgression (DAMT) are dreams wherein the dreamer absentmindedly performs an action that he or she has been trying to stop (one classic example is of a quitting smoker having dreams of lighting a cigarette). Subjects who have had DAMT have reported waking with intense feelings of guilt. One study found a positive association between having these dreams and successfully stopping the behavior.Dreaming and the "real world"
Dreams can link to actual sensations, such as the incorporation of environmental sounds into dreams such as hearing a phone ringing in a dream while it is ringing in reality, or dreaming of urination while wetting the bed. Except in the case of lucid dreaming, people dream without being aware that they are doing so. Some philosophers have concluded that what we think as the "real world" could be or is an illusion (an idea known as the skeptical hypothesis about ontology). The first recorded mention of the idea was by Zhuangzi, and was also discussed in Hinduism; Buddhism makes extensive use of the argument in its writings. It was formally introduced to western philosophy by Descartes in the 17th century in his Meditations on First Philosophy.Recalling dreams
The recall of dreams is extremely unreliable,
though it is a skill that can be trained. Dreams can usually be
recalled if a person is awakened while dreaming. Dreams that are
difficult to recall may be characterized by relatively little
affect,
and factors such as salience,
arousal, and
interference play a role in dream recall. A dream
journal can be used to assist dream recall, for psychotherapy or
entertainment purposes.
Déjà vu
The theory of déjà vu dealing with dreams indicates that the feeling of having previously seen or experienced something could be attributed to having dreamt about a similar situation or place, and forgetting about it until one seems to be mysteriously reminded of the situation or place while awake.Dream pre-programming
Dream pre-programming is a hypnotic practice used among some medical and stage hypnotists. It allows the hypnotist to control (or let the patient control) their own dreams. One way that a hypnotist will use this is by telling the person that when they fall asleep that they see a button. And that if they want to enter "DreamScape" that they should press that button. Then they will enter a world just like Earth, but they will have complete control. They will control things with their mind. Dream pre-programming can also help someone for a test or a big event in life. The hypnotist would make the subject dream that event as going perfect, so the subject will get a level of confidence.Dream incorporation
In one use of the term, "dream incorporation" is a phenomenon whereby an external stimulus, usually an auditory one, becomes a part of a dream, eventually then awakening the dreamer. There is a famous painting by Salvador Dalí that depicts this concept, titled "Dream Caused by the Flight of a Bee around a Pomegranate a Second Before Awakening" (1944).The term "dream incorporation" is also used in
research examining the degree to which preceding daytime events
become elements of dreams. Recent studies suggest that events in
the day immediately preceding, and those about a week before, have
the most influence .
See also
References
Further reading
- The interpretation of dreams
- The Practice of Psychotherapy. "The Practical Use of Dream-analysis"
- Dreams (Routledge Classics)
- The Nature of Consciousness
External links
- [http://www.mindsneeze.comMindSneeze] Share your Dreams
- Astral Society Dream Discussion, Information, and Community
- Dreams at the Open Directory Project.
- The International Association for the Study of Dreams
- Designer dreams through yoga
- More information on the expectation fulfilment theory of dreaming
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