Definition of Dreams
Dreams: Thoughts, visions, and other sensations that occupy
the
mind in sleep.
Dreams occur during that part of sleep when there are rapid eye
movements (REMs). We have 3 to 5 periods of REM sleep per night. They
usually come at intervals of 1-2 hours and are quite variable in
length. An episode of REM sleep may be brief and last but 5 minutes.
Or it may be much longer and go for over an hour.
About 20% of sleep is REM sleep. If you sleep 7-8 hours a night,
perhaps an hour and half of that time, 90 minutes, is REM sleep.
REM sleep is characterized by a number of other features besides
REM, including rapid, low-voltage brain waves on the
electroencephalographic (EEG) recording, irregular breathing and
irregular heart rate and -- what may be most evident to someone else
-- involuntary muscle jerks.
Non-REM (NREM) sleep is dreamless sleep. During NREM, the brain
waves on the EEG are typically slow and of high voltage, the
breathing and heart rate are both slow and regular, the blood
pressure is low, and the sleeper is relatively still. NREM sleep is
divided into 4 stages of increasing depth.
About 80% of sleep is NREM sleep. If you sleep 7-8 hours a night,
all but maybe an hour and a half is spent in dreamless NREM sleep.
Dreams are penetrable; it has been found experimentally that one
can communicate with a person who is dreaming.
The content of dreams is sometimes the topic of psychoanalysis. While
this method of therapy is less common than it once was, some doctors
still look at dreams as a diagnostic clue to medical disorders. For
example, children with bipolar disorders have been found to
frequently have a particular type of nightmares, and especially lucid
dreams are a side-effect of certain medications. These clues indicate
that chemicals in the brain, as well as life events and our own
preoccupations, influence our dreams.
Dreaming is not uniquely human. Cats and dogs dream, judging from
the physiologic features. So apparently do many other animals.
The word "dream" is traditionally traced back to an Anglo-Saxon
word meaning joy, gladness, or mirth. However, "dream" more likely
came from another word (from Sanskrit) meaning deception. Thus, when
we dream, is it a joy or a deception?
Last Editorial Review: 3/14/1999 9:52:00 AM
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