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Michael Schredl

Dept Sleep laboratory, Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim, Germany.

7 papers in the library · 377 citations · publishing 2004-2022

Papers

Frequency of Lucid Dreaming in a Representative German Sample

Perceptual and Motor Skills February 1, 2011 Michael Schredl, Daniel Erlacher 81 citations

About half (51%) of a representative sample of 919 German adults reported having had at least one lucid dream—a dream in which the person knows they are dreaming. Women recalled lucid dreams significantly more often than men, and lucid dream recall decreased with age. These differences may be explained by overall dream recall frequency, which correlated moderately (r = .57) with lucid dream frequency. Education, marital status, and income showed no relationship with how often people had lucid dreams. The high prevalence suggests that laboratory research on lucid dreams could further understanding of sleep, dreaming, and consciousness.

Increased Lucid Dreaming Frequency in Narcolepsy

SLEEP April 30, 2015 Michael Rak, P. Beitinger, Axel Steiger et al. 56 citations

People with narcolepsy recall dreams and nightmares significantly more often than healthy controls, and they also experience lucid dreaming—awareness of dreaming during a dream—at a much higher rate. Among 60 narcolepsy patients and 919 controls, narcolepsy patients reported roughly double the frequency of dream recall and nightmares, and their lucid dreaming frequency was about four times higher. Most narcolepsy patients who had experienced lucid dreaming said it helped relieve the distress from nightmares. Medication did not affect lucid dreaming frequency, though it did reduce dream recall and nightmare frequency.

Frequency of Lucid Dreams and Lucid Dream Practice in German Athletes

Imagination Cognition and Personality February 21, 2012 Daniel Erlacher, Tadas Stumbrys, Michael Schredl 36 citations

About 57% of German athletes have experienced a lucid dream at least once, 24% have one or more per month, and 9% of lucid dreamers have used the dream state to practice sport skills. Most of those athletes felt that such practice improved their waking performance. The prevalence of lucid dreaming among professional athletes is similar to the general population, but the proportion of lucid dreams relative to all dreams is nearly twice as high (14.5% vs. 7.5%). The findings suggest lucid dreaming offers a unique form of mental rehearsal for sports.

Dream lucidity is associated with positive waking mood.

Consciousness and cognition August 1, 2020 Abigail Stocks, Michelle Carr, Remington Mallett et al. 33 citations

Higher levels of lucidity during dreaming are associated with more positive dream content and a more positive mood the following day. Twenty participants completed a week-long online dream diary after practicing lucid dream induction techniques. The study found no link between lucidity and subjective sleep quality. The findings suggest that cultivating lucid dreams may help improve waking mood, though longer-term studies are needed.

Lucid Dreaming and the Feeling of Being Refreshed in the Morning: A Diary Study.

Clocks & sleep March 1, 2020 Michael Schredl, Sophie Dyck, Anja Kühnel 22 citations

Lucid dreaming does not impair the feeling of being refreshed in the morning. In a five-week dream diary study with 149 participants, nights with a lucid dream were followed by a higher feeling of being refreshed compared to nights with a non-lucid dream. Earlier cross-sectional studies had linked frequent lucid dreaming to poorer sleep quality, but that relationship was explained by nightmare frequency, not lucid dreaming itself. The findings indicate no negative effect of lucid dreaming on sleep's restorative function, though future research should use both objective and subjective measures of daytime tiredness.

Dream Recall Frequency, Lucid Dream Frequency, and Personality During the Covid-19 Pandemic.

Imagination, cognition and personality December 1, 2022 Michael Schredl, Anellka Remedios, Silvia Marin-Dragu et al. 8 citations

Dream recall frequency and lucid dream frequency vary widely among individuals and are partly linked to personality traits. An online survey of 1,537 participants (1,150 women, 387 men; mean age 35.1 years) confirmed that openness to experience is associated with higher dream recall, supporting the lifestyle hypothesis. However, associations between the Big Five personality factors and lucid dream frequency were less consistent; for example, neuroticism showed a negative relationship with lucid dream frequency. Effect sizes were small. Lucid dream frequency was related to COVID-19-related worries, while dream recall frequency was not.