Literature DB >> 15560767

Immediate and delayed incorporations of events into dreams: further replication and implications for dream function.

Tore A Nielsen1, Don Kuiken, Geneviève Alain, Philippe Stenstrom, Russell A Powell.   

Abstract

The incorporation of memories into dreams is characterized by two types of temporal effects: the day-residue effect, involving immediate incorporations of events from the preceding day, and the dream-lag effect, involving incorporations delayed by about a week. This study was designed to replicate these two effects while controlling several prior methodological problems and to provide preliminary information about potential functions of delayed event incorporations. Introductory Psychology students were asked to recall dreams at home for 1 week. Subsequently, they were instructed to select a single dream and to retrieve past events related to it that arose from one of seven randomly determined days prior to the dream (days 1-7). They then rated both their confidence in recall of events and the extent of correspondence between events and dreams. Judges evaluated qualities of the reported events using scales derived from theories about the function of delayed incorporations. Average ratings of correspondences between dreams and events were high for predream days 1 and 2, low for days 3 and 4 and high again for days 5-7, but only for participants who rated their confidence in recall of events as high and only for females. Delayed incorporations were more likely than immediate incorporations to refer to events characterized by interpersonal interactions, spatial locations, resolved problems and positive emotions. The findings are consistent with the possibility that processes with circaseptan (about 7 days) morphology underlie dream incorporation and that these processes subserve the functions of socio-emotional adaptation and memory consolidation.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15560767     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2869.2004.00421.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Sleep Res        ISSN: 0962-1105            Impact factor:   3.981


  15 in total

1.  Dream-enacting behaviors in a normal population.

Authors:  Tore Nielsen; Connie Svob; Don Kuiken
Journal:  Sleep       Date:  2009-12       Impact factor: 5.849

2.  Memory, Sleep and Dreaming: Experiencing Consolidation.

Authors:  Erin J Wamsley; Robert Stickgold
Journal:  Sleep Med Clin       Date:  2011-03-01

3.  Experimental research on dreaming: state of the art and neuropsychoanalytic perspectives.

Authors:  Perrine M Ruby
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2011-11-18

4.  Assessing the dream-lag effect for REM and NREM stage 2 dreams.

Authors:  Mark Blagrove; Nathalie C Fouquet; Josephine A Henley-Einion; Edward F Pace-Schott; Anna C Davies; Jennifer L Neuschaffer; Oliver H Turnbull
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-10-26       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Autobiographical memory and hyperassociativity in the dreaming brain: implications for memory consolidation in sleep.

Authors:  Caroline L Horton; Josie E Malinowski
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-07-02

6.  A Supplement to Self-Organization Theory of Dreaming.

Authors:  Wei Zhang
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2016-03-08

Review 7.  Microdream neurophenomenology.

Authors:  Tore Nielsen
Journal:  Neurosci Conscious       Date:  2017-03-11

8.  A Novel Approach to Dream Content Analysis Reveals Links Between Learning-Related Dream Incorporation and Cognitive Abilities.

Authors:  Stuart M Fogel; Laura B Ray; Valya Sergeeva; Joseph De Koninck; Adrian M Owen
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2018-08-06

9.  Maternal representations in the dreams of pregnant women: a prospective comparative study.

Authors:  Jessica Lara-Carrasco; Valérie Simard; Kadia Saint-Onge; Vickie Lamoureux-Tremblay; Tore Nielsen
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-08-27

10.  Characteristics of the memory sources of dreams: A new version of the content-matching paradigm to take mundane and remote memories into account.

Authors:  Raphael Vallat; Benoit Chatard; Mark Blagrove; Perrine Ruby
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-10-11       Impact factor: 3.240

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