The interpreter has a key function in the realization of a dream: his analysis can determine how the dream will come to pass.
Why do we dream? A product of our brain’s neurophysiology, dreaming is a complex experience that can take on many emotional tones and simulate reality to varying degrees. As a result, there is still ...
Excerpted from When Brains Dream: Exploring the Science and Mystery of Sleep by Antonio Zadra and Robert Stickgold. Copyright (c) 2021 by Antonio Zadra and Robert ...
That dream where you're falling from the sky and jerk awake is actually pretty common. On average, a person will have between one and six dreams a night, and the most vivid ones occur during REM sleep ...
Do dreams have an impact on our daily lives? While we know a lot about brain correlates of dreaming (e.g. REM-rapid eye movement sleep) we know little about the social psychology of dreams or of the ...
Have you ever woken from a dream, emotionally laden with anxiety, fear, or a sense of unpreparedness? Typically, these kinds of dreams are associated with content like losing one’s voice, teeth ...
Most people dream every night, but many do not remember their dreams when they wake up. There are several potential reasons that a person may forget their dreams. Some people may recall brief, obscure ...
Have you ever woken from a dream, emotionally laden with anxiety, fear, or a sense of unpreparedness? Typically, these kinds of dreams are associated with content like losing one’s voice, teeth ...
At the start of the 21st century, scientists had little idea why we sleep, leading J. Allan Hobson at Harvard Medical School to quip that the only known function of sleep was to cure sleepiness. But ...
I once dreamt that I lived inside the belly of a Tyrannosaurus rex. Another dream about a haunted refrigerator that kept reappearing in my kitchen despite my repeated attempts to get rid of it makes ...