Why
your eyes dart around when dreaming By Tia Ghose Published August 18,
2015.
The
vivid, bizarre images that infuse dreams are formed when people make the
darting, rapid eye movements characteristic of a certain stage of sleep, new
research suggests. The findings confirm a long-held scientific hypothesis that
such rapid eye movements during sleep reflect a person viewing their
dream-world in the same way that they would take in a scene when awake.
"There was this idea that we scan the dream image, or the mental image
when we dream," said study co-author Yuval Nir, a sleep researcher and
neuroscientist at 'Tel Aviv' University in Israel. "But it's been very
difficult to prove it." ] What dreams are made of The mystery
of why humans dream has long fascinated scientists and philosophers. Are dreams
hints of a person's deepest, most subconscious longings, as Sigmund Freud
proposed? Are they the way the brain works out real-life problems? Or are
dreams the day's mental debris, which the brain sweeps up every night as a
person slumbers? Yet despite years of study, scientists had few answers about
this mysterious space between sleep and wakefulness. For about 60 years,
researchers knew that people dreamed during the rapid eye movement (REM) phase
of sleep. Many hypothesized that the darting of the eyes corresponded to people
"seeing" images in their dreams, but there was no way to know for
sure, Nir said. But then Nir and his colleagues found a unique way to test out
the idea. Some people with epilepsy continue to have many seizures despite
medication, and instead must have electrodes implanted in their brains. The
electrodes send small electrical jolts to the parts of the brain responsible
for the seizures, and often the treatment completely eliminate the seizures,
Nir said. But the electrodes can also detect and record the electrical firing from
individual neurons, or brain cells. Sight in sleep So Nir, Dr. Itzhak Fried, a
cognitive neurophysiologist at UCLA, and their colleagues asked 19 people who
were having brain implants for epilepsy if they would also be willing to have
some of their brain activity recorded while they slept. The brain
recordings revealed that every time the dreamers moved their eyes, neurons in
the medial temporal lobe of the brain showed a burst in activity, the
researchers reported. (. ) . In past studies, Fried
had found that the medial temporal lobe lit up when people looked at images of
famous people and places, such as the Golden Gate Bridge or Jennifer Aniston;
simultaneously, they also made eye movements similar to those found during REM
sleep. In 2010 Fried and his colleagues published a paper in the journal Nature
showing that neurons in this brain region were under voluntary, conscious
control when people were awake. The new study finally confirms the long-held
hypothesis that eye movements during REM sleep correspond to people visualizing
imagery in their dreams, said Dr. J. Allan Hobson, a psychiatrist and sleep
researcher at Harvard Medical School in Massachusetts, who was not involved in
the current study. Many other parts of the brain were also active during REM
sleep, and the team still isn't sure how those brain regions are involved in
dreaming, Nir said. Theoretically, researchers could one day read someone's
dream activity using brain-firing data, determining whether the person was
visualizing, say, an adorable kitten versus a scary monster . To do that,
researchers would have to record someone's brain cell-firing signals during
sleep, and then wake the person up to ask about the dream that individual was
having. They would also need to collect data on the brain's electrical firing
signals when the person viewed those same images during wakefulness. "This
is the Holy Grail that we'd like to do someday." . "The only
thing is, it's quite challenging to collect dream reports in this particular
setting. After all, people undergoing brain surgery are already stressed about
their health and are distracted by other concerns; waking them up in the middle
of the night would be too intrusive, Nir said. Purpose of dreams? Though the
study focuses on the mechanics of dreaming, it has other implications, Hobson
said. "I think this data is just another nail in the coffin in the idea
that dreaming is a sort of symbolic distortion of past activity," Hobson
said, referring to Freudian ideas that dreams have symbolic significance that
must be interpreted. Instead, because the same types of visual activity are
under a person's conscious control when the individual is awake, the
dream-state brain-cell firing "shows very clearly that dreaming is a form
of consciousness ," Hobson said. "You might call it an altered state
of consciousness, an alternative state of consciousness. As for the purpose of
dreams , that is still an open question.
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