A computer can predict what you're dreaming about based on brain wave activity, new research suggests.
By measuring people's brain activity during waking moments,
researchers were able to pick out the signatures of specific dream
imagery — such as keys or a bed — while the dreamer was asleep.
"We know almost nothing about the function of dreaming," said study
co-author Masako Tamaki, a neuroscientist at Brown University. "Using
this method, we might be able to know more about the function of
dreaming."
The findings, which were published today (April 4) in the journal
Science, could also help scientists understand what goes on in the
brain when people have nightmares.
Sleepy mystery
Exactly why people dream is
a mystery. Whereas the founder of psychoanalysis Sigmund Freud may
have thought dreams were about wish fulfillment, others believe dreams
are irrelevant byproducts of the sleep cycle. And yet another theory
holds that dreams allow the mind to continue working on puzzles faced
during the day. In general, most people believe their dreams have meaning.
Scientists have dreamt of being able to look inside the brain's
sleepy wonderland. Past studies had suggested that people's brain
activity can be decoded to reveal what they are thinking about: For
instance, scientists have decoded movie clips from brain waves.
Even
though the team just tried to read dream imagery from one person's
waking brain activity, they found some common patterns for broad
classes of imagery, such as scenery versus people, Tamaki told
LiveScience.
"There is a similarity amongst the subjects, so from that result, we
could pick up some basic dream content and then we can build a model
from those base contents, and they may apply to other people," Tamaki
said.
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