Neurobiology and clinical implications of lucid dreaming
Medical Hypotheses July 6, 2013 Sérgio Mota‐rolim, John Fontenele Araújo 50 citations
Lucid dreaming—being aware of dreaming during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep—may be linked to increased frontal lobe activity, contrasting with psychosis, which involves reduced frontal activity and dream-like features intruding into wakefulness. The authors propose that frontal brain stimulation during REM sleep could trigger lucid dreams, offering a test of this hypothesis. They suggest lucid dreaming research could advance understanding of consciousness and its disorders, serve as therapy for recurrent nightmares in depression and PTSD, and aid physical rehabilitation through motor imagery during dreams.