Vivid dreams linked to deeper feeling of sleep

Researchers have found that vivid, immersive dreams can make sleep feel deeper and more restorative, even during periods of high brain activity. A study analyzing brain recordings from 44 healthy adults showed that participants reported their deepest sleep after intense dream experiences. The findings challenge traditional views of deep sleep as minimal brain activity.

Scientists at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca analyzed 196 overnight EEG recordings from 44 healthy adults as part of a European Research Council-funded project on sensory stimulation and sleep perception. Over four nights in a lab, participants were awakened more than 1,000 times to report their experiences and rate sleep depth and sleepiness levels just before waking. High-density electroencephalography tracked brain activity throughout. The results revealed that reports of deep sleep occurred not only during periods without conscious experience but also following vivid, immersive dreams, typically associated with REM sleep where brain activity resembles wakefulness. In contrast, shallow sleep correlated with fragmented or vague mental experiences lacking clear content. Giulio Bernardi, professor of neuroscience at the IMT School and senior author, explained: 'In other words, not all mental activity during sleep feels the same: the quality of the experience, especially how immersive it is, appears to be crucial.' He added that immersive dreams may reshape how sleepers interpret brain activity, making sleep feel deeper. As the night progressed, physiological sleep pressure decreased, yet participants perceived their sleep as deepening, mirroring an increase in dream immersiveness. This suggests dreams help maintain a sense of restorative sleep by buffering brain fluctuations and preserving separation from the external world. Bernardi noted: 'Understanding how dreams contribute to the feeling of deep sleep opens new perspectives on sleep health and mental well-being.' The study, conducted in collaboration with Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna in Pisa and Fondazione Gabriele Monasterio, appears in PLOS Biology (DOI: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3003683). Authors include Adriana Michalak and others.

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Split-image of a young adult: depressed and tired on weekday vs. peacefully sleeping and rested on weekend, illustrating study on catch-up sleep reducing depressive symptoms.
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Study links weekend catch-up sleep to fewer daily depressive symptoms in 16- to 24-year-olds

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Teenagers and young adults who sleep longer on weekends than on weekdays were less likely to report feeling sad or depressed every day, according to a U.S. study that analyzed National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey data from 2021 to 2023.

Researchers have found that playing sounds associated with unsolved puzzles during REM sleep can help lucid dreamers solve those puzzles more effectively the next day. The study involved 20 participants who signaled awareness in their dreams through eye movements and sniffs. This technique, known as targeted memory reactivation, leverages the brain's memory processes to enhance learning during sleep.

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Neuroscientists at Northwestern University have demonstrated that subtle sound cues during REM sleep can influence dream content, leading to improved creativity in solving brain teasers. In a study with 20 participants, 75% reported dreams related to cued puzzles, which they solved at higher rates the next day. The findings suggest sleep may play a key role in creative problem-solving.

A small sleep-lab study from the University of Pennsylvania reports that continuous “pink noise” played overnight reduced participants’ REM sleep, while earplugs helped blunt deep-sleep losses linked to intermittent aircraft noise. The findings add to a limited evidence base about the long-term effects of broadband “sleep sounds,” and the researchers urge caution—particularly for young children.

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Neuroscientists have identified eight body-like maps in the visual cortex that mirror the organization of touch sensations, enabling the brain to physically feel what it sees in others. This discovery, based on brain scans during movie viewing, enhances understanding of empathy and holds promise for treatments in autism and advancements in AI. The findings were published in Nature.

Older adults with weaker or more irregular daily rest-activity rhythms were more likely to be diagnosed with dementia over about three years, according to a study published in *Neurology*. The research also linked later-afternoon activity peaks to higher dementia risk, though it did not establish that disrupted circadian rhythms cause dementia.

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A study has found that a low dose of the psychedelic 5-MeO-DMT produces brain activity patterns in an advanced Tibetan Buddhist meditator similar to those during meditation. Researchers compared the drug's effects to the lama's practiced non-dual meditation states. The findings suggest overlaps in neural responses linked to reduced self-perception.

 

 

 

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