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How often do you think dreams? Have you ever woke up to know what you dreamed but unable to remember the details? It turns out that the ability to remember a dream can be affected by the combination of reasons.
Researchers in Italy have spent the past four years studying “Morning Dream Recall”, as it has been revealed to them Search In the journal Monday Communication psychology. Their job is to find out how different features and behaviors are waking up to our dreams to remember our dreams seem to be apparent. Understanding the mobility of the morning dreams has an important impact for dreaming – it is a mysterious brain function that continues from specific scientific understanding.
“Our search proves that dreams are not only a matter of opportunity but also a reflection of how personal attitudes, cognitive features and mobility interacts,” IMT School for Advanced Studies Lusa, a psychologist writer Jiulio Bernardy, said at the university. StatementThe “These insights do not only give us a depth of understanding about the procedures behind the dream but also affects the role of dreams in mental health and human consciousness research.”
Bernardy and his colleagues studied more than 200 participants between the ages of 18 and 70. Researchers told the participants to record their dreams and a sleep monitoring wrist watch for 15 days. Before and after this period, the participants completed the tests and questions on various personal issues, including interest in dreams, tendency towards confusion and levels of anxiety.
Researchers have observed the skills of reconsideration of the morning dream among the participants, along with several potential dominant factors. For example, people with self-exploited positive outlook about dreams and people with daydreaming people remember their dreams more frequently. Asons Tuas also seemed to have played a role, as there was a higher rate of overall higher rates throughout the spring as opposed to winter.
People who spent more time for light sleep, as well as young people were more likely to remember their dreams. On the other hand, older people often wake up with the feeling they dreamed, but the dream could not be remembered – this is an event that researchers are known as “White Dreams”. Interestingly, their “observations support the idea that white dreams represent the real dream experience, the memory of their contents faded,” they wrote in research.
“The data collected in this project will serve as a reference for the future people,” Valentina Else, the first author of the study of Cognitive, Computational and Social Neuroscience at the IMT School for Advanced Studies LuciA. “This will allow our dream pathological changes and their potential prognostic and diagnostic values ​​to move forward.”
It is worth emphasizing that dreams are self-reported, making the study biased. However, the detection of the possible influences of Bernardi, Elsi, Elsi and their colleagues has focused on a mysterious brain activity that has fascinated humanity for the millennium.