Data derived from electrophysiological studies, from performances in right-hemisphere - mediated tasks after REM awakenings, and from brain-lesioned patients, though not always homogeneous, suggest prevalent involvement of the right hemisphere in elaborating mental activity during sleep. This conforms with the hypothesis that the characteristics of dream content holistic and visuospatial, with many bizarre aspects - express a prevalent right-hemisphere (RH) activity (Bakan, 1976; Broughton, 1975; Jouvet, 1973) or that the RH is more involved only in the visuospatial aspects of dreaming (Kerr & Foulkes, 1981). The first electrophysiological data were supplied by Goldstein, Stoltzfus, and Gardocki (1972), who observed an EEG asymmetry, with an amplitude reduction on the left during NREM, which shifted to the right during REM. On the basis of the assumption that mental activity is reflected in an EEG power decrease, we can hypothesize that right- or left-side asymmetries reflect the involvement of different hemispheres in cognitive functions elaboration.
Neurological approaches to the dream problem
1992
Abstract
Data derived from electrophysiological studies, from performances in right-hemisphere - mediated tasks after REM awakenings, and from brain-lesioned patients, though not always homogeneous, suggest prevalent involvement of the right hemisphere in elaborating mental activity during sleep. This conforms with the hypothesis that the characteristics of dream content holistic and visuospatial, with many bizarre aspects - express a prevalent right-hemisphere (RH) activity (Bakan, 1976; Broughton, 1975; Jouvet, 1973) or that the RH is more involved only in the visuospatial aspects of dreaming (Kerr & Foulkes, 1981). The first electrophysiological data were supplied by Goldstein, Stoltzfus, and Gardocki (1972), who observed an EEG asymmetry, with an amplitude reduction on the left during NREM, which shifted to the right during REM. On the basis of the assumption that mental activity is reflected in an EEG power decrease, we can hypothesize that right- or left-side asymmetries reflect the involvement of different hemispheres in cognitive functions elaboration.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
prod_452757-doc_170631.pdf
solo utenti autorizzati
Descrizione: Neurological approaches to the dream problem
Tipologia:
Versione Editoriale (PDF)
Dimensione
1.73 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
1.73 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri Richiedi una copia |
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


