Literature DB >> 17498981

Nightmares: a new neurocognitive model.

Tore Nielsen1, Ross Levin.   

Abstract

Nightmares are a prevalent parasomnia associated with a range of psychiatric conditions and pathological symptoms. Current knowledge about how nightmares are produced is still influenced by neo-psychoanalytic speculations as well as by more recent personality, evolutionary and neurobiological models. A majority of these models stipulate some type of emotionally adaptive function for dreaming, e.g., image contextualization, affect desomatization, mood regulation or fear extinction. Nightmares are widely seen to be either an intensified expression of an emotionally adaptive function or, conversely, as evidence of its breakdown. Our recent, affective network dysfunction (AND) model, integrates the tenets of many prior models in proposing that nightmares reflect problems with the fear extinction function of dreaming. This new model accounts for a wide range of dysphoric dream imagery (bad dreams, idiopathic nightmares, post-traumatic nightmares) and incorporates recent findings in the areas of brain imaging, sleep physiology, PTSD, anxiety disorders and the consolidation and extinction of fear memories.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17498981     DOI: 10.1016/j.smrv.2007.03.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sleep Med Rev        ISSN: 1087-0792            Impact factor:   11.609


  74 in total

1.  Assessment and treatment of common pediatric sleep disorders.

Authors:  Sricharan Moturi; Kristin Avis
Journal:  Psychiatry (Edgmont)       Date:  2010-06

2.  Nightmares, neurophenomenology and the cultural logic of trauma.

Authors:  Laurence J Kirmayer
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2009-06

Review 3.  A systematic review of cognitive-behavioral treatment for nightmares: toward a well-established treatment.

Authors:  Jaap Lancee; Victor I Spoormaker; Barry Krakow; Jan van den Bout
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2008-10-15       Impact factor: 4.062

4.  A new theoretical approach to the functional meaning of sleep and dreaming in humans based on the maintenance of 'predictive psychic homeostasis'.

Authors:  Luigi F Agnati; Peter W Barlow; František Baluška; Paolo Tonin; Michele Guescini; Giuseppina Leo; Kjell Fuxe
Journal:  Commun Integr Biol       Date:  2011-11-01

Review 5.  Sleep-dependent memory consolidation and its implications for psychiatry.

Authors:  Monique Goerke; Notger G Müller; Stefan Cohrs
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2015-10-30       Impact factor: 3.575

6.  Posttraumatic stress and sleep: differential relations across types of symptoms and sleep problems.

Authors:  Kimberly Babson; Matthew Feldner; Christal Badour; Casey Trainor; Heidemarie Blumenthal; Natalie Sachs-Ericsson; Norman Schmidt
Journal:  J Anxiety Disord       Date:  2011-03-17

7.  Nightmare Severity Is Inversely Related to Frontal Brain Activity During Waking State Picture Viewing.

Authors:  Louis-Philippe Marquis; Sarah-Hélène Julien; Andrée-Ann Baril; Cloé Blanchette-Carrière; Tyna Paquette; Michelle Carr; Jean-Paul Soucy; Jacques Montplaisir; Tore Nielsen
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2019-02-15       Impact factor: 4.062

8.  Quantitative electroencephalography during rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep in combat-exposed veterans with and without post-traumatic stress disorder.

Authors:  Daniel J Cohen; Amy Begley; Jennie J Alman; David J Cashmere; Regina N Pietrone; Robert J Seres; Anne Germain
Journal:  J Sleep Res       Date:  2012-07-30       Impact factor: 3.981

9.  Alexithymia associated with nightmare distress in idiopathic REM sleep behavior disorder.

Authors:  Isabelle Godin; Jaques Montplaisir; Jean-François Gagnon; Tore Nielsen
Journal:  Sleep       Date:  2013-12-01       Impact factor: 5.849

Review 10.  Dreaming and the brain: from phenomenology to neurophysiology.

Authors:  Yuval Nir; Giulio Tononi
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2010-01-14       Impact factor: 20.229

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