Literature DB >> 21704532

Walking dreams in congenital and acquired paraplegia.

Marie-Thérèse Saurat1, Maité Agbakou, Patricia Attigui, Jean-Louis Golmard, Isabelle Arnulf.   

Abstract

To test if dreams contain remote or never-experienced motor skills, we collected during 6 weeks dream reports from 15 paraplegics and 15 healthy subjects. In 9/10 subjects with spinal cord injury and in 5/5 with congenital paraplegia, voluntary leg movements were reported during dream, including feelings of walking (46%), running (8.6%), dancing (8%), standing up (6.3%), bicycling (6.3%), and practicing sports (skiing, playing basketball, swimming). Paraplegia patients experienced walking dreams (38.2%) just as often as controls (28.7%). There was no correlation between the frequency of walking dreams and the duration of paraplegia. In contrast, patients were rarely paraplegic in dreams. Subjects who had never walked or stopped walking 4-64 years prior to this study still experience walking in their dreams, suggesting that a cerebral walking program, either genetic or more probably developed via mirror neurons (activated when observing others performing an action) is reactivated during sleep.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21704532     DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2011.05.015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Conscious Cogn        ISSN: 1053-8100


  7 in total

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

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7.  Visuo-motor and interoceptive influences on peripersonal space representation following spinal cord injury.

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  7 in total

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