Emerging technology is helping brain scientists unravel the mystery of our dreams
"This dream took place in the water. Two sisters wanted to be mermaids. So they turned into mermaids but one of the sisters really wanted to have her sister's legs, so she took them. She returned them to their rightful owner after she was done using them. One of my sorority sisters whom I haven't seen in a while also in my dream. She was telling me she was going to school in another state, and I told her that I had family there. I felt uncomfortable talking to her and I could sense tension between us. We had been taking care of some babies as we were talking and I felt like she didn't like me, or had something against me."
Yes, only in dreams could these nutty, random narratives ever occur. These 3 erratic chronicles are all part of The DreamBank database, a collection of over 20,000 dream reports, used by scientists conducting dream research. Dream research relies on these accounts, which help further develop what we know about the human brain during sleep.
According to an article published in Newsweek titled, "What Dreams Are Made Of", the most substantial event in dream science was in the 1950s, with the discovery of a phase of sleep characterized by rapid eye movement (REM). REM is a stage of sleep distinguished by intense brain activity and rapid eye movement. People awakened in the midst of REM sleep report highly vivid dreams. Through analysis of electroencephalograph (EEG) scans of the sleeping brain, scientists could see that brain activity during REM sleep was similar to that of the waking brain, and thus concluded that most dreaming does indeed take place during the REM phase. According to the article, about a quarter of sleeping time in adult humans is REM sleep, and during this time, the body is debilitated, but the brain is buzzing.
Yellow, orange, and red regions indicate higher levels of brain activity while blue and purple relate to lower levels of brain activity. (Photo: nanobioart.com) |
While scientists do not know all the answers about our dreams and what they may mean, through dream and REM research, some of the mysteries have been, and are continuing to be, uncovered.
For example, do you ever wonder why are our dreams are often totally random? Brain scans during REM sleep indicate that the most active area of the brain during this time is the limbic system, which controls our emotions, while the prefrontal cortex, your cognitive function complex, is much less operative. This explains why our dreams often have no coherent story line, and often are totally arbitrary.
Many people also question whether dreams can help us uncover problems in our lives, and reveal secret truths about ourselves. Studies now show that another highly active section of the brain during REM sleep is the anterior cingulate cortex, which helps detect disparities in our lives. Eric Nofzinger, director of the Sleep Neuroimaging Program at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center explains, “It’s as if the brain surveys our internal [environment] and tries to figure out what it should be doing, and whether our actions conflict with who we are," (Kantrowitz et al., 2004).
Sigmund Freud thought our true ambitions, hidden during waking life, arise to the surface in dreams, and that dreams were the honest expressions of unconscious desires. Clara Hill, who studies the use of dreams in therapy at the University of Maryland supports this claim, noting that, “dreams are a back door into patient’s thinking. Dreams reveal stuff about you that you didn’t know was there, and can uncover hidden emotions and feelings," (Kantrowitz et al., 2004).
The article also indicates that dreaming can help certain kinds of learning, and enhance performance. It can help people reveal solutions to problems and find inspiration, as well as help them deal with traumatic events. Deirdre Barret, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and writer of the book “The Committee of Sleep” found that people can use dreams as a way to problem solve if they focus on the current dilemma before they fall asleep.
A study of dreams can also provide insight into the causes and explanation of mental illnesses. The article explains that Schizophrenics, for example, have poor-quality dreams that mainly comprise of objects and not people. Happy, healthy people, on the other hand, have rich dreams with detailed story lines, and show lesser signs of depression.
Although still a mystery, dreaming is omnipresent in all of us, and it can help aid in finding the answers to the mysteries of humanity. Regardless of theories or answers, dreaming is good for our health, a mental-health exercise, if you will. So for all you dreamers out there, keep on dreaming because dreaming, like thinking, is what makes us human.
- ReferencesKantrowitz, B., Springen, K., Wingert, P., & Ulick, J. (2004). WHAT DREAMS ARE MADE OF. Newsweek, 144(6), 40-47. Retrieved from EBSCOhost.