The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
May 14, 2025
Çağatay Demirel, Jarrod Gott, Kristoffer Appel et al.
8 citations
Lucid dreaming, where a person becomes aware they are dreaming, is linked to REM sleep. To overcome previous research limitations, a new preprocessing pipeline was applied to pooled EEG data from multiple labs. Sensor-level differences between lucid and nonlucid REM sleep were minimal, but source-level analysis revealed reduced beta power (12-30 Hz) in right central and parietal areas, including the temporoparietal junction, during lucid dreaming. Alpha-band (8-12 Hz) connectivity increased compared to nonlucid REM sleep. During eye signaling of lucidity, gamma1 power (30-36 Hz) increased in right temporo-occipital regions, including the precuneus, and interhemispheric gamma1 connectivity rose. These patterns suggest shifts in network communication underlying changes in perception, self-awareness, and cognitive control.
bioRxiv Preprint Server
April 9, 2024
Çağatay Demirel, Jarrod Gott, Kristoffer Appel et al.
2 citations
preprint
Lucid dreaming, a state of conscious awareness during REM sleep, is associated with specific brain activity patterns. Compared to non-lucid REM sleep, EEG sensor-level differences were few. However, source-level analysis revealed increased gamma1 power (30-36 Hz) in left-hemispheric temporal areas during lucid dreaming, potentially reflecting verbal insight processes, and in right temporo-occipital regions including the precuneus around the onset of lucid eye signaling, linked to self-referential thinking. Beta power (12-30 Hz) decreased in right central and parietal areas including the temporo-parietal junction, possibly related to conscious reality assessment. Alpha-band (8-12 Hz) functional connectivity increased, contrasting with psychedelic states and highlighting enhanced self-awareness.
Revista de la Facultad de Ciencias Medicas (Cordoba, Argentina)
March 8, 2022
Stella Maris Valiensi, Cecilia Raffaelli, Roberto Rosler et al.
A Spanish-language adaptation of the Lucidity and Consciousness in Dreams Scale (LuCID) was developed and tested in 216 adults aged 18–76 from Argentina and Mexico. The scale measures dream control, introspection, positive and negative emotion, dissociation, memory, thoughts, and realism. Of the respondents, 56 individuals (24.5%) scored high enough to indicate lucid dreaming. The adapted scale detected lucid dreamers at a rate of nearly one-third of the sample and requires further validation in a selected lucid-dreamer population.