Neuroscientists find clue to how we remember dreams
Date: Feb-17-2014Why we dream is still a mystery to science. But differences in brain activity may
give a clue as to why some people frequently remember their dreams while others rarely do,
according to neuroscientists in France.
Perrine Ruby, an Inserm Research Fellow at the Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, and
colleagues report their findings in the journal Neuropsychopharmacology.
In previous work, they had established that high dream recallers (people who remember their
dreams nearly every day) wake up at night twice as often as low dream recallers (people who
rarely remember their dreams).
They also found that the brains of high dream recallers are more
reactive to sounds during sleep and wakefulness.
For instance, they found that high dream recallers responded more strongly to hearing
their name.
More periods of wakefulness may give brain chance to memorize dreams
The researchers suggested that having a brain that reacts more to sounds may trigger the wakeful periods
at night, and it is during these periods that the brain memorizes any dreams. As Ruby
states, "the sleeping brain is not capable of memorizing new information; it needs to awaken to be
able to do that."
In this new study, they sought to identify the brain regions involved and how they differed
between the high dream recallers and the low dream recallers.
They recruited 41 volunteers - 21 high dream recallers who recalled their dreams on average five mornings a week, and 20 low dream recallers who recalled their dreams on average only
twice a month.
Using Positron Emission Tomography (PET scans) they monitored the brain activity of these two
groups during sleep and wakefulness.
They found that the temporo-parietal junction (TPJ) and the medial prefrontal cortex showed more spontaneous activity in the high dream recallers, both during sleep and when
awake.
Previous studies by the South African neuropsychologist Mark Solms had also shown that
lesions in these two brain areas stop people being able to recall dreams altogether.
This new study is important because it highlights that both during sleep and wakefulness,
high and low dream recallers have different levels of brain activity in these regions.
More active TPJ could explain higher levels of wakefulness
The researchers suggest if the TPJ - a part of the brain that acts like an information
processing hub - is more active in high dream recallers, then this could be making them more
alert to external stimuli, which in turn causes them to be awake more at night, giving their
brain more opportunities to encode dreams into memory.
However, they do not exclude the possibility that dream production, as opposed to dream
memorization, could also be different between the two groups, and they conclude:
"Our results suggest that high and low dream recallers differ in dream memorization, but do
not exclude that they also differ in dream production. Indeed, it is possible that high dream
recallers produce a larger amount of dreaming than low dream recallers."
Written by Catharine Paddock PhD
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