Why do we dream Amy Adkins

In the third millenium BCE,

Mesopotamian kings recorded and
interpreted their dreams on wax tablets.

A thousand years later,

Ancient Egyptians wrote a dream book

listing over a hundred common dreams
and their meanings.

And in the years since,

we haven’t paused in our quest
to understand why we dream.

So, after a great deal
of scientific research,

technological advancement,

and persistence,

we still don’t have any definite answers,
but we have some interesting theories.

We dream to fulfill our wishes.

In the early 1900s,

Sigmund Freud proposed that while all
of our dreams, including our nightmares,

are a collection of images
from our daily conscious lives,

they also have symbolic meanings,

which relate to the fulfillment
of our subconscious wishes.

Freud theorized that everything
we remember when we wake up from a dream

is a symbolic representation

of our unconscious primitive thoughts,
urges, and desires.

Freud believed that by analyzing
those remembered elements,

the unconscious content would be revealed
to our conscious mind,

and psychological issues stemming
from its repression

could be addressed and resolved.

We dream to remember.

To increase performance
on certain mental tasks,

sleep is good,

but dreaming while sleeping is better.

In 2010, researchers found

that subjects were much better
at getting through a complex 3-D maze

if they had napped and dreamed
of the maze prior to their second attempt.

In fact, they were up to
ten times better at it

than those who only thought of the maze
while awake between attempts,

and those who napped but did not dream
about the maze.

Researchers theorize that certain
memory processes

can happen only when we are asleep,

and our dreams are a signal
that these processes are taking place.

We dream to forget.

There are about 10,000 trillion
neural connections

within the architecture of your brain.

They are created by everything you think
and everything you do.

A 1983 neurobiological theory of dreaming,
called reverse learning,

holds that while sleeping,
and mainly during REM sleep cycles,

your neocortex reviews
these neural connections

and dumps the unnecessary ones.

Without this unlearning process,

which results in your dreams,

your brain could be overrun
by useless connections

and parasitic thoughts could disrupt
the necessary thinking

you need to do while you’re awake.

We dream to keep our brains working.

The continual activation theory proposes
that your dreams result

from your brain’s need to constantly
consolidate and create long-term memories

in order to function properly.

So when external input falls
below a certain level,

like when you’re asleep,

your brain automatically triggers

the generation of data
from its memory storages,

which appear to you in the form of
the thoughts and feelings

you experience in your dreams.

In other words,

your dreams might be
a random screen saver your brain turns on

so it doesn’t completely shut down.

We dream to rehearse.

Dreams involving dangerous and threatening
situations are very common,

and the primitive instinct
rehearsal theory

holds that the content of a dream
is significant to its purpose.

Whether it’s an anxiety-filled night of
being chased through the woods by a bear

or fighting off a ninja in a dark alley,

these dreams allow you to practice
your fight or flight instincts

and keep them sharp and dependable
in case you’ll need them in real life.

But it doesn’t always have
to be unpleasant.

For instance, dreams
about your attractive neighbor

could actually give your reproductive
instinct some practice, too.

We dream to heal.

Stress neurotransmitters in the brain
are much less active

during the REM stage of sleep,

even during dreams
of traumatic experiences,

leading some researchers to theorize

that one purpose of dreaming is to take
the edge off painful experiences

to allow for psychological healing.

Reviewing traumatic events
in your dreams with less mental stress

may grant you a clearer perspective

and enhanced ability to process them
in psychologically healthy ways.

People with certain mood disorders
and PTSD often have difficulty sleeping,

leading some scientists to believe
that lack of dreaming

may be a contributing factor
to their illnesses.

We dream to solve problems.

Unconstrained by reality
and the rules of conventional logic,

in your dreams, your mind can create
limitless scenarios

to help you grasp problems

and formulate solutions
that you may not consider while awake.

John Steinbeck called it
the committee of sleep,

and research has demonstrated

the effectiveness of dreaming
on problem solving.

It’s also how renowned chemist
August Kekule

discovered the structure
of the benzene molecule,

and it’s the reason that sometimes
the best solution for a problem

is to sleep on it.

And those are just a few of the more
prominent theories.

As technology increases our capability
for understanding the brain,

it’s possible that one day

we will discover
the definitive reason for them.

But until that time arrives,
we’ll just have to keep on dreaming.

在公元前第三个千年,

美索不达米亚国王在蜡板上记录并
解释了他们的梦想。

一千年后,

古埃及人写了一本梦书,

列出了一百多个常见的梦
及其含义。

从那以后的几年里,

我们并没有停下来
寻求了解我们为什么做梦。

所以,经过大量
的科学研究、

技术的进步

和坚持,

我们仍然没有确定的答案,
但我们有一些有趣的理论。

我们梦想实现我们的愿望。

在 1900 年代初期,

西格蒙德弗洛伊德提出,虽然
我们所有的梦,包括我们的噩梦,

都是
我们日常生活中的图像的集合,

但它们也具有象征意义

,与
我们潜意识愿望的实现有关。

弗洛伊德的理论认为,
我们从梦中醒来时所记得的一切都是

我们无意识的原始思想、
冲动和欲望的象征性表现。

弗洛伊德认为,通过分析
那些记忆的元素

,无意识的内容将被揭示
给我们的有意识的头脑,

并且

可以解决和解决源于其压抑的心理问题。

我们梦想记住。

为了提高
某些心理任务的表现,

睡眠是好的,

但在睡觉时做梦更好。

2010 年,研究人员发现

,如果受试者
在第二次尝试之前打瞌睡并梦到迷宫,他们在通过复杂的 3-D 迷宫

时会更好

事实上,他们比那些只
在两次

尝试之间保持清醒时想到迷宫的人,

以及那些打盹但没有
梦到迷宫的人,在这方面的表现要好十倍。

研究人员推测,某些
记忆过程

只有在我们睡着时才会发生,

而我们的梦
是这些过程正在发生的信号。

我们梦想忘记。 你的大脑结构中

有大约 10,000 万亿个
神经连接

它们是由你所想
的一切和你所做的一切创造的。

一个 1983 年的梦的神经生物学理论,
称为反向学习,

认为在睡觉时
,主要是在 REM 睡眠周期中,

你的新皮质会检查
这些神经连接

并丢弃不必要的连接。

如果没有

这个导致你做梦的忘却过程,

你的大脑可能会
被无用的连接所淹没

,寄生的想法可能会破坏

你在清醒时需要做的必要思考。

我们梦想让我们的大脑保持运转。

持续激活理论
认为,你的梦想

源于你的大脑需要不断
巩固和创造长期

记忆才能正常运作。

因此,当外部输入
低于某个水平时,

例如当您睡着时,

您的大脑会自动触发

从其记忆存储中生成数据,

这些数据以您在梦中经历
的想法和感受的形式

出现在您面前。

换句话说,

您的梦想可能是
您的大脑打开的随机屏幕保护程序,

因此它不会完全关闭。

我们梦想排练。

涉及危险和威胁
情况的梦很常见

,原始本能
演练理论

认为梦的内容
对其目的很重要。

无论是被熊追赶穿过树林的充满焦虑的夜晚,

还是在黑暗的小巷中与忍者战斗,

这些梦想都可以让您练习
战斗或逃跑的本能

,并在需要时保持敏锐和可靠
在真实生活中。

但这并不
总是令人不快。

例如,
梦到你迷人的

邻居实际上也可以让你的生殖
本能得到一些练习。

我们梦想治愈。

在睡眠的快速眼动阶段,大脑中的压力神经递质的
活跃度要低得多

即使是在
梦到创伤经历时也是如此,这

导致一些研究人员

推测,做梦的一个目的是
摆脱痛苦的经历,

以进行心理治疗。

以较少的精神压力回顾梦中的创伤事件

可能会让你有更清晰的视角,

并增强
以心理健康的方式处理它们的能力。

患有某些情绪障碍
和 PTSD 的人经常难以入睡,这

使一些科学家认为
,缺乏梦想

可能是
导致他们患病的一个因素。

我们梦想解决问题。

不受现实
和常规逻辑规则的约束,

在你的梦中,你的头脑可以创造
无限的场景

来帮助你抓住问题,

并制定
出你醒着时可能不会考虑的解决方案。

约翰斯坦贝克
称它为睡眠委员会

,研究证明

了做梦
对解决问题的有效性。

这也是著名化学家
奥古斯特·凯库勒如何

发现
苯分子的结构的

,这也是为什么有时
解决问题的最佳方法

就是睡在上面的原因。

这些只是一些比较
突出的理论。

随着技术提高我们
理解大脑的能力

,有一天我们可能

会发现
它们的确切原因。

但在那之前,
我们只能继续做梦。