Scientific American Mind and Brain 29.12.11
Research finds that dreams may help consolidate and soothe troubled memories and experiences. Christie Nicholson reports
November
28, 2011
Sleep also helps us learn.
During REM sleep, which is the dreaming stage of sleep, the brain stops
releasing stress
chemicals. Now a new study finds that as we dream we can even soothe our
stressful associations to certain experiences.Scientists scanned the brains of 35 subjects while they viewed emotionally arousing images. Half of the subjects viewed the images in the morning and again in the evening of the same day. The other half viewed the same images in the evening and then again the next morning after sleeping.
Those who slept between viewings reported a significant decrease in their emotional reaction to seeing the images the second time. And brain scans corroborated the self-reports, showing a reduction of activity in the amygdala, an area responsible for processing emotions.
The research was published in the journal Current Biology.
The researchers note that by processing emotional experiences during REM sleep, when norepinephrine levels are dramatically reduced, we feel less strongly about such experiences when we wake.
As Shakespeare knew when he said that sleep “knits up the ravell’d sleave of care” and was “the balm of hurt minds.”
—Christie Nicholson
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