Can Dreaming Help You Sleep More Deeply?

United States News News

Can Dreaming Help You Sleep More Deeply?
United States Latest News,United States Headlines
  • 📰 TIMEHealth
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 242 sec. here
  • 6 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 100%
  • Publisher: 63%

A new study reveals that immersive dreams are linked to deeper perceived sleep.

In the no-man’s-land between going to sleep and waking up, your brain goes through myriad states. On an electroencephalogram , or a readout of the brain’s electrical activity, scientists and doctors can tell each stage apart.

But it is not totally clear relieves fatigue, allows the brain to process the events of the day, and appears to aid in memory and learning, a type of lab experiment where they repeatedly wake up sleeping people through the course of a night and ask them to fill out questionnaires. Afocuses on awakenings during a stage called non-rapid-eye-movement sleep 2, or NREM2 for short, which tends to make up about half of all our time asleep. Researchers found something intriguing: When people were woken from immersive dreams, which on EEG look a lot like being awake, they nevertheless reported having felt deeply asleep. This suggests, the researchers speculate, that vivid dreams in this sleep phase may be contributing to a feeling of having slept deeply.. One approach to studying dreams is to try to alter them by playing sleepers certain sounds or by waking them up and letting them sleep again, and looking at whether these changes affect how they feel later.“We try to modulate brain activity, and we try to have an effect on how subjects feel subjectively, in terms of sleep depth and what they experience during sleep,” says Dr. Giulio Bernardi, a professor at IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca in Italy and an author of the new paper. In this new study, he and his colleagues investigated NREM2 sleep, a phase that can include a variety of states, including immersive dreams, simple dreams, and no dreams at all. The team awakened 44 sleepers in NREM2 and had them report what was going through their minds, including whether they had been dreaming. Sometimes they had been, but had no memory of what it contained—a so-called “white dream.” If they remembered the dream, they were asked to rate its vividness and immersiveness, among other features. They were also asked to rate how deeply they had been asleep. The deepest subjective sleep occurred mainly when the EEG showed people had been deeply unconscious and the electrical patterns that represent consciousness disappeared.But people also felt they’d been deeply asleep when they reported immersive dreams, although their EEG patterns looked more conscious. “The brain can become more active, more awake, and still we can feel that we are deeply asleep if we are dreaming,” says Bernardi.Could dreaming make the difference between a restless night of sleep and a satisfying one? This study isn’t set up to tell us that, since it doesn’t address restfulness in the morning. Given how often people were awakened, it might be hard to tease apart the influence of dreaming and the influence of multiple awakenings on how sleepers felt. But the study does suggest the question of how dreams are linked to sleep depth is worthy of further research. Karen Konkoly, who studies dreaming at the University of Cambridge in the U.K. and was not involved in this work, has herself participated in a similar study. “It was fascinating to observe my mind at different times of night and realize how often I actually didn't feel like I'd been fully asleep,” she wrote in an email.“So to me, the best way to tell that I was in fact deeply asleep is when I was awoken from an immersive dream. I knew I was asleep because I was dreaming. That is my best intuition explaining this finding, that it's difficult to tell how deeply asleep one is, and an immersive dream is one clear way to answer that question.”Bernardi thinks there may be more to it. “While dreaming does indicate sleep, it does not necessarily imply ‘deep’ sleep per se,” he wrote in an email. “What I find particularly telling in our work is that participants sometimes reported having been deeply asleep even when they could not recall any specific dream content; only a general impression of having been in a rich or immersive state.” Maybe, he speculates, that feeling of depth comes from a sense of disconnection with the outside world. That’s something you could get from being completely unconscious or perhaps from a dream so immersive that the external reality doesn’t penetrate.The study is a reminder that there is more to sleep than simply being unconscious. Perceptions can be powerful: For instance,. What seems to have gone wrong in those cases is that their perception of having been asleep is knocked askew. Sometimes dreams can feel a little too real, though. People who experience a phenomenon known as “epic dreaming” report having dreamt all night, often performing repetitive tasks in mind-numbing detail. “In the end, when they wake up in the morning, they are super-tired, as if they worked for the whole night,” says Bernardi. “So dreams probably have to stay in the right range, let's say, of immersivity—otherwise they become negative for our sleep.”Are You an Otrovert? What to Know About the New Personality Type'A Joke': House Republicans Reject Senate's DHS Funding Deal

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

TIMEHealth /  🏆 121. in US

 

United States Latest News, United States Headlines

Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.

As In-State Momentum Builds, Wisconsin Commits Help Push for Top ProspectsAs In-State Momentum Builds, Wisconsin Commits Help Push for Top ProspectsRecent Badger commits are pushing hard for fellow in-state prospects to commit to Wisconsin.
Read more »

Padres On Verge of Getting Major Starting Pitching HelpThe Padres pitching staff could be getting a major boost in the coming weeks.
Read more »

Ghosts S05E16: 'Woodstone Royale' Preview: Iain Armitage Guest StarsGhosts S05E16: 'Woodstone Royale' Preview: Iain Armitage Guest StarsGhosts 5x13 'St. Hetty's Day 2: The Help' Season 5 Episode 13 Promo - A St.
Read more »

Sam Raimi’s Long-Awaited Return to Horror Is Officially a Global Streaming HitSam Raimi’s Long-Awaited Return to Horror Is Officially a Global Streaming HitRachel McAdams looking confused whilst sat on a plane in 'Send Help'
Read more »

Cognitive shuffling: The micro-dreaming game that helps you sleepCognitive shuffling: The micro-dreaming game that helps you sleepFor over a decade, this image-based technique has helped people switch off their busy brains and fall asleep at night. How exactly does it play upon the mind?
Read more »

This community science project aims to help bumblebees, you can help them tooThis community science project aims to help bumblebees, you can help them tooThe Bumble Bee Atlas project is active across 21 states and trains volunteers to survey, photograph, and report bumblebee sightings.
Read more »



Render Time: 2026-03-31 22:52:05