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Scientists used to think that dreams were just a by-product of the brain’s night-time regimen. However, new research has shown that dreaming serves several functions, especially for our learning and memory.
If you’re not sleeping well (perhaps not reaching deep sleep or waking up multiple times a night), then you’re missing out on one more essential tool your brain needs to keep you healthy and sharp.
Even though you may not know whether you’re dreaming regularly (we dream at all stages of sleep, not just during the rapid eye movement, or REM, phase, and don’t necessarily remember all the content), it’s safe to say that if you’re consistently cycling through all four stages of sleep without regular interference (meaning you’re getting a full night’s rest), then you’re going to reap the benefits of dreams. The advantages of night-time dreaming are numerous.
Dr Frank Lipman and Neil Parikh explore how dreams can benefit our learning and memory in the final installment of their series offering advice to improve your sleep (file image)
YOUR NIGHT-TIME MEMORY STORE
The brain reactivates and consolidates newly received memories and information titbits while we sleep, and researchers have seen that this process is directly reflected in the content of our dreams. But some experts believe that dreams are not just reflecting what we need to know and remember. They are actively cataloguing it.
Their findings suggest that our dreams are a sort of virtual reality experience as we witness this memory processing.
Experiments in animals and humans support the theory that our dreams are like a ‘rehearsal’ of that new information, allowing our brain to put it into practice and actively organise and consolidate the material.
Recent research suggests that we are more likely to dream about emotionally intense experiences, and the theta brain waves during REM sleep are one way in which the brain consolidates those memories. This has led some researchers to examine how REM sleep plays a role in trauma recovery and mood regulation.
EVEN NIGHTMARES HAVE BENEFITS
Nightmares occur most frequently in REM sleep but, unlike lucid dreams, these intense, often unwelcome imaginings happen with decreased prefrontal cortex activity, meaning there’s less emotional control and a more overwhelming sense of arousal.
Researchers now believe that these experiences are the brain’s way of preparing us for when bad things happen, like an emotional ‘dress rehearsal’. It’s almost as though the mind is anticipating bad things happening, and then trying out solutions. Some experts believe that this is a defence mechanism rooted in our earliest days — if something bad happened once, there was a chance it could happen again. So having a recurring nightmare of that event could keep you on guard.
DREAMS CAN LEAD TO CREATIVITY
Dreams don’t just replay what we have experienced or learned, they also create brand-new mash-ups and free associations between what we have seen and what we know. Our dreams offer a portal into our deepest, most unfettered creativity, as well as to new approaches to problem-solving.
This is evident in famous artists and thinkers who credit dreams with inspiring their greatest creations, such as Paul McCartney and the melody for Yesterday or Dmitri Mendeleev and the periodic table of elements.
Dr Frank Lipman and Neil Parikh explained REM is the stage of sleep that is most frequently associated with dreams (file image)
UNDERSTANDING YOUR SLEEP CYCLE
The nature of your dreams can lend insight into what cycle of sleep you are dreaming in:
STAGE ONE: During this fuzzy, foggy time just before you drift off or wake up, dreams are usually short but feel vivid and visceral, like having the sensation of ‘falling’ to sleep. Because you are still in a semi-awake state, these dreams often incorporate real-world content such as noises you are actually hearing (your alarm, a siren outside).
STAGE TWO: In this lighter stage of sleep, dreams usually include pieces of real-life events from the day. They’re often described as being ‘thought-like’, as though you are merely processing different ideas while you sleep. As you revisit stage two sleep throughout the night, your dreams will gradually get longer and more vivid.
StAGE THREE: Even though your brain is still active during deep sleep, your dreams are typically the least vivid during this stage as the brain tends to memory processing and cognition renovation.
REM: This is the stage of sleep most frequently associated with dreams. Those that occur during these more ‘active’ peaks in your sleep cycle are the ones you usually remember most: they are typically the longest, most vivid, and most bizarre. (We also get a lot of REM sleep in the morning, so the timing is more conducive to remembering these dreams.)
Also, this is the stage of sleep when the emotional parts of the brain are most active, which is what experts suspect makes our REM dreams feel more poignant and affecting.
INSIDE YOUR DREAM FACTORY
Different parts of the brain contribute to different types of dreams, giving them each unique qualities:
THE CORTEX: This is where most of our memories are stored, and it is the main content creator for our dreams. It explains why our dreams are strangely autobiographical and pulled from seemingly random snippets of things we have seen or done.
THE SENSORY CORTICES: This audio/visual storehouse is also active in providing dream details, which is why some dreams seem like they come with their own unique sounds and, less frequently, smells.
THE MOTOR CORTEX: Responsible for controlling our movements when we’re awake, this part of the brain also kicks in at night and contributes to dreams that feel ‘active’, like playing a sport or running from something.
THE LIMBIC SYSTEM: This is where we process our emotions, and it is most active during REM sleep — the reason why REM dreams tend to feel more expressive than those from other stages.
DECODING YOUR SLEEP
Just like you can track your heart rate and calories burned during exercise, new sleep technology and apps allow you to get an even clearer picture of what’s happening after you drift off.
If you are the type of person who gets obsessive about your results, step away from the tracker.
This feedback should help you measure success and feel good, not prompt you to get mired in how little REM sleep you got one night and how it’s all your fault because of what you ate for lunch.
Ideally, you can look at your data in a non-judgmental way, just observing and knowing that they can only get better from here.
But if you are having a tough time getting into that headspace, then tracking may not be for you. In that case, go by how you feel. If you feel more rested, then you must be sleeping better.
For the most part, sleep-tracking technologies — especially those with sensor capabilities — are registering your sleep latency, or the amount of time it takes you to fall asleep (five to 15 minutes is optimal but 30 minutes is acceptable).
They also register the stages of sleep, or the length of time you spend in each phase of sleep, such as deep sleep and REM; total sleep, or the duration of time you are asleep; and restfulness, which measures how frequently you wake in the night.
This data isn’t 100 per cent scientifically ironclad but it offers insight into what’s going on with your sleep. Here is how to make sense of the numbers so you can gauge where you are on the road to good rest:
THE STAGES OF SLEEPÂ
Your sleep at night is a rhythm within a rhythm. As you rest, you cycle through four stages of sleep, ideally four or five times each night.
Because the body accomplishes different tasks during each stage, it’s essential to your health and your overall rhythm that each of these stages is not only reached but also as uninterrupted as possible.
Dr Frank Lipman and Neil Parikh said the data collected by sleep trackers isn’t 100 per cent scientifically ironclad (file image)
STAGE ONE (Non-REM)
This is when you transition between wakefulness and sleep. Your breathing and heart rate slow, your muscles begin to relax, and your core temperature dips. At this point you can still easily be woken by distractions and noise.
STAGE TWO (Non-REM)
You are still in light sleep but now your brain waves slow down and your body enters a deep state of relaxation. Your brain activity is dominated by theta waves, which foster learning, memory, and intuition.
During this stage, theta waves are interrupted by short bursts of waves called spindles, believed to aid the consolidation of information and memories.
STAGE THREE (Non-REM)
This is the beginning of deep sleep, also known as slow-wave or delta sleep. Brain waves slow further; your heart rate and respiration slow dramatically; your body temperature cools further; and your muscles are completely relaxed.
This is when human growth hormone is released (essential for keeping the body supple and resilient) and the regenerative processes happen.
The brain begins to ‘detoxify’ using the glymphatic system (waste removal for the central nervous system) and DNA repair is at its peak. Surges of energy have also been detected during this time, as the body seems to store energy for the next day.
Dr Frank Lipman and Neil Parikh said interruptions during REM deprive the brain from sorting through daily events and making cognitive connections (file image)
STAGE FOUR (REM)
This is when the brain almost exclusively produces slow, impactful delta waves, which are generated in deepest meditation and dreamless sleep.
They are to credit for sleep feeling restorative and for us waking up feeling refreshed. While the rest of your muscles are temporarily paralysed (besides your respiratory and cardiovascular functions), vivid dreaming hits its stride and your brainwaves look similar to those when you are awake.
This stage gets its namesake from the quick, random movements of your eyes that occur during it. The REM portion of your sleep cycle lengthens as the night progresses, allowing your brain to perform the maintenance that benefits your learning, memory, and mood.
Interruptions during this part of sleep (as a result of your snoring, your partner’s snoring, sudden noises, anxious awakenings, muscle spasms) deprive the brain from sorting through daily events and making cognitive connections, ultimately leading to a range of consequences from difficulty focusing and learning to depression.
Hitting all four stages of sleep is where quantity of sleep and quality meet. In order to hit the deepest, most restful sleep, your body has to pass through all the other stages first. The order goes: 1, 2, 3, 1, 3, 2, 1, REM. No matter what you do, you cannot rush this process and you cannot cheat sleep.
Ideally, you would spend one to two hours in deep sleep (REM) for every seven to nine hours of a night’s rest.
Adapted from Better Sleep, Better You by Frank Lipman and Neil Parikh, published by Thorsons at £9.99. © Frank Lipman and Neil Parikh 2021. To order a copy for £8.79, go to mailshop.co.uk/books or call 020 3308 9193. Delivery charges may apply. Free UK delivery on orders over £20. Promotional price valid until April 24, 2021.
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