| Literature DB >> 26191010 |
Caroline L Horton1, Josie E Malinowski2.
Abstract
In this paper we argue that autobiographical memory (AM) activity across sleep and wake can provide insight into the nature of dreaming, and vice versa. Activated memories within the sleeping brain reflect one's personal life history (autobiography). They can appear in largely fragmentary forms and differ from conventional manifestations of episodic memory. Autobiographical memories in dreams can be sampled from non-REM as well as REM periods, which contain fewer episodic references and become more bizarre across the night. Salient fragmented memory features are activated in sleep and re-bound with fragments not necessarily emerging from the same memory, thus de-contextualizing those memories and manifesting as experiences that differ from waking conceptions. The constructive nature of autobiographical recall further encourages synthesis of these hyper-associated images into an episode via recalling and reporting dreams. We use a model of AM to account for the activation of memories in dreams as a reflection of sleep-dependent memory consolidation processes. We focus in particular on the hyperassociative nature of AM during sleep.Entities:
Keywords: autobiographical memory; continuity hypothesis; dreaming; hyperassociativity; memory consolidation; sleep
Year: 2015 PMID: 26191010 PMCID: PMC4488598 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.00874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1AM consolidation model. Waking experiences are schematically represented as a circle, each containing numerous constituent fragments. Individual elements (such as characters, colors, objects present, sounds, etc.) feature alongside an action (such as shouting at a colleague) and a context (such as the environmental setting and an emotional tone). Focused waking cognition involves the selective activation of semantic associations to some of the fragments. The corresponding dream involves the synthesis of different fragments (elements, actions and a context, plus their possible associations) taken from previous waking experiences. Each of those fragments could elicit a hyperassociation. The consolidated elements are those that have been repeatedly or strongly activated. They remain preferentially accessible following sleep.
Application of the autobiographical memory consolidation model: child’s dream.
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Watching Sat on Grandma’s knee in her chair, playing a new game on Grandma’s tablet. The object of the game is to fit puzzle shapes into a template. It makes a noise when the correct pieces are placed. This activates associated thoughts of photographs on the tablet, Grandma’s cats (sat nearby) and feelings of mastery when I accomplish the puzzle. | A monster (like the main character in the film) scares me in my bed. I am very frightened. I want to leave but I have to complete a puzzle to escape. I have to try several times but I can’t fit the last piece. I wake up just as the monster reaches me. This activates several hyperassociated elements such as being afraid of other specific film characters (who are usually friendly), being lost inside the tablet and seeing various shapes (within the puzzle). | Ability to fit the puzzle pieces together. Monsters can be scary. |
The dream report has been taken from a 2.5-year-old child. The waking experiences have been provided by the child’s mother and the hyperassociated elements are hypothesized.
Application of the autobiographical memory consolidation model: adult’s dream.
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Sat at the computer at my desk in my office, preparing for an upcoming presentation on memory to a non-specialist audience. Trying to think of examples of procedural memory that people can relate to. People talking in the corridor nearby. This activates associated thoughts of colleagues in the field, the organizer of the presentation event, and other work projects that require urgent attention. Listening to the radio whilst washing up in the kitchen. A song by a well-known artist is being played, about a woman who escapes the daily hassles of her family and work by getting on a train. This activates associated thoughts of the singer’s husband (also well-known), own family commitments (needing to stock up on food to prepare better meals for the children) and work projects looming, such as the presentation described above. | Delivering a presentation (from (i)) on memory in a generic sports hall (an exam location) to people sat in rows behind small examination desks. The invigilator is the singer’s husband (from (ii)). I try to pronounce a brain region but falter several times. The scene shifts to a busy, unfamiliar road. I’m walking along it, discussing my shopping list with the singer’s husband again. We walk past his wife and wave. Several hyperassociated elements are activated, such as examination fears of nervousness, lack of preparation, brain regions I’ve been reading recently and images of the (unfamiliar) authors of related papers, hustle and bustle from the busy road, a memory of a newsagents from childhood, thoughts about my baby daughter’s ability to wave when she recognizes someone… | Representation of the film character consolidates recognition of their face and voice. A need to shop for food for the children. Examples of procedural memory needed for the presentation. A need to prepare the presentation so to avoid being nervous, and faltering. (The emotional context has been removed.) |
The waking experiences and the dream report have been taken from the first author’s own experiences.