Microdream neurophenomenology.
Neuroscience of consciousness January 1, 2017 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1093/nc/nix001 via PubMed
Summary
The review explores the transition from wakefulness to sleep, focusing on 'microdreams' as a new area of study. It discusses how examining microdreams can help classify dreaming experiences, understand memory inputs, and identify new types of imagery. These insights may enhance our understanding of dream neurophysiology and its role in memory consolidation, while also contributing to broader discoveries in consciousness neuroscience.
Study at a glance
| Design | review |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Exploring microdreams offers valuable insights into the phenomenology of dreaming and its connections to memory and consciousness. |
Abstract
Nightly transitions into sleep are usually uneventful and transpire in the blink of an eye. But in the laboratory these transitions afford a unique view of how experience is transformed from the perceptually grounded consciousness of wakefulness to the hallucinatory simulations of dreaming. The present review considers imagery in the sleep-onset transition-"microdreams" in particular-as an alternative object of study to dreaming as traditionally studied in the sleep lab. A focus on microdream phenomenology has thus far proven fruitful in preliminary efforts to (i) develop a classification for dreaming's core phenomenology (the "oneiragogic spectrum"), (ii) establish a structure for assessing dreaming's multiple memory inputs ("multi-temporal memory sources"), (iii) further Silberer's project for classifying sleep-onset images in relation to waking cognition by revealing two new imagery types ("autosensory imagery," "exosensory imagery"), and (iv) embed a potential understanding of microdreaming processes in a larger explanatory framework ("multisensory integration approach"). Such efforts may help resolve outstanding questions about dream neurophysiology and dreaming's role in memory consolidation during sleep but may also advance discovery in the neuroscience of consciousness more broadly.