27 Mei, 2006

About the Dream

INTRODUCTION
Dream is a story that a person 'watches' or appears to take part in during sleep. Dream events are imaginary, but they are related to real experiences in the dreamer's life. They seem real to the dreamer while they are taking place. There are many types of dreams. Some are pleasant, others are annoying, and still others are frightening.

Everyone dreams, but some people never recall dreaming. Others remember only a little about a dream they had just before awakening and nothing about earlier dreams. No one recalls every dream and, in general, dreams are very easily forgotten.
What dreams consist of
The events of a dream usually form a story. In some dreams, the dreamer takes part in the story. In others, the dreamer merely 'watches' the tale unfold. In most dreams, the dreamer cannot control what is happening, there is little logical thought, and events occur that could not happen in real life. Occasionally, the dreamer will realize that he or she is dreaming and may be able to alter what happens in the dream without waking up. This is known as a lucid dream.

People see in most dreams, and they may also hear, smell, touch, and taste in them. Most dreams occur in color, though the color is often recalled only vaguely. Dreaming thought seems to put things together in new and unexpected ways. In some cases, this has led to important scientific discoveries or highly imaginative creative works.
The biology of dreams
Dreaming, like all mental processes, is a product of the brain and its activity. Whether a person is awake or asleep, the brain continuously gives off electrical waves. Scientists measure these waves with an instrument called an electroencephalograph. At most times during sleep, the brain waves are large and slow. But at certain times, they become smaller and faster. During periods of fast brain waves, the person's eyes move rapidly as though the sleeper were watching a series of events. This stage of sleep, called REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep, is when most dreams occur. If awakened during REM sleep, the person is likely to recall details of the dream. Most adults have three to five REM periods each night. They occur every 90 to 100 minutes and last from 5 to 30 minutes each. But not all dreams come from REM periods. Some people report dreamlike mental activity when awakened from non-REM sleep or as they are falling asleep.

During REM sleep, the pathways that carry nerve impulses from the brain to the muscles are blocked. Therefore, the body cannot move during dreams. Also, the cerebral cortex-the part of the brain involved in higher mental functions-is much more active during REM sleep than during nondreaming sleep. The cortex is stimulated by neurons (nerve cells) that carry impulses from the part of the brain called the brain stem.
The meanings of dreams
Dreams include events and feelings that the dreamer has experienced. Most dreams are related to events of the day before the dream, and many minor incidents of the hours before sleep appear in dreams.

Many experts who study dreams also feel that they are related to deep wishes and fears of the dreamer, and several theories explaining the meaning of dreams have been developed. During the 1890's, Sigmund Freud, an Austrian physician who originated psychoanalysis, developed one of the best-known theories of dream interpretation. Freud suggested that dreams are fulfillments of wishes, usually in disguised form. The disguise-or 'dream language'-involves condensation (combining several ideas into one image), displacement (shifting a feeling from one idea or person to another), and symbolism (the use of symbols to represent what cannot be pictured directly).

Some scientists have suggested that biological discoveries about dreaming have made psychological theories of dreaming, such as Freud's, unnecessary or false. These scientists argue that a dream is a meaningless response of the cerebral cortex to random stimulation from the brain stem. However, waking thought is also a response of the cerebral cortex to stimulation, often random, from the brain stem. Therefore, the biology involved does not make dreams meaningless any more than it makes waking thought meaningless. Most psychiatrists and psychologists still consider dreams psychologically meaningful.
Functions of dreams
The function of dreaming is not completely understood. Dreaming sleep may play a role in restoring the brain's ability to handle such tasks as focused attention, memory, and learning. In addition, most psychiatrists and psychologists still believe that a person's hidden feelings often surface in dreams. Psychotherapists therefore analyze patients' dreams in an effort to help the patients understand themselves better.
-copyNpaste from the information in XP-

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