Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Nature of Dreams
- Psychological theory
- Freud's psychoanalytical theory
- Freud (1990) -
the unconscious
mind expresses
inself through
dreams
- the content of a person's
dream can reveal what is
in their unconscious
- Dreams as primary-process
thought (repression)
- id - associated with irrational,
instinct-driven unconscious
(PRIMARY-PROCESS THOUGHT)
- this form of thought is unacceptable to the adult
conscious mind so is relegated to our dreams
- or, repressed
- if we didn't
dream, the
energy invested
tin these desires
would build up
and threaten our
sanity
- Dreams as wish fulfilment
- Freud - all
dreams were the
unconscious
fulfilment of
wishes that
could not be
satisfied in the
conscious mind
- dreams protect the
sleeper (primary-process
thought) but also allow
some expression to these
buried urges (repression)
- The symbolic nature of dreams
- Freud - the contents of dreams
are expressed symbolically
- the real meaning of a dream
is transformed into a more
harmless form through the
process of dreamwork
- latent content =>
manifest content
- dreamwork =
various processes
- condensation -
complex dream
thoughts are
condensed into
images
- symbolism -
a symbol
replaces an
action,
person, or
idea
- Neurobiological theory
- dreams occur with
rapid eye movements
- Hobson and McCarley (1977) suggested
that the characteristic neurobiological activity
associated with REM sleep can explain what
we experience as dreams
- Activation
- evidence from EEG that
the cerebal cortex is highly
active during REM sleep
- although few
external stimuli are
being received
- motor cortex is also active but the impulses
don't reach the muscles that control the limbs
- we're effectively paralysed during REM sleep
- Hobson and
McCarley (1977)
suggested that
during REM sleep,
the brain stem
generates random
signals that are
essentially
indistinguishable
from external stimuli
- Synthesis
- process that dreams
are created
- when activation reaches the
areas of the brain that normally
process internal/external
sensations, these areas of the
brain essentially do the same
job that they do when we are
awake
- try to make sense of the stimuli being recevied
- synthesis proposes that the
often bizarre nature of
dreams is due to the mixing
of the electronical signals
from the brain stem with
stored images in memory
- the activation-synthesis hypothesis
assumes that dreams are as meaningful
as they can be, given the fact they're
generated by random nervous impulses
- Evaluation -
Psychological
- Arguments against
Freud's dream theory
- Falsification
- Freud's theory is
difficult to falsify
- don't have a way of demonstrating that Freud's
interpretation of a dream is correct because Freud argued
that support for his interpretation of the dream could be
given in 2 ways: the dreamer accepted it, or rejected it
- the rejection was a form of
confirmation because the patient is
repressing unacceptable thoughts
- Are dreams wish fulfilment
- Freud suggests that there's a
class of dreams that don't seem to
be fulfilments of wishes
- gave example of one of his own dreams
- regarded this dream as a 'sensible warning'
rather than wish fulfilment
- Research evidence
- Irrational and
rational thinking
- Braun (1999) - if the rational, thinking
part of the brain is not active during
REM sleep, then how do we explain the
processing that takes place to turn
latent into manifest conent?
- Dreamwork
- 'condensation' is supported
by research on neural
networks in the brain
- research involves computer simulations that
aim to mimic the action of the brain
- computer simulations show that neural
networks deal with an overload memory
by condensing 'memories'
- Evaluation -
Neurobiological
- Supporting evidence
- some evidence that supports the
activation-synthesis hypothesis
- Braun (1997) used PET
scans to show that the
brain stem is indeed active
during REM sleep
- Solms' evidence shows that activity in the
prefrontal cortex is suppressed during dreaming
which could explain the bizarre nature of dreams
- this also challenges the synthesis portion
of this theory because this part of the brain
should be active for synthesis to take
place
- Challenging evidence
- REM activity
- Solm's research indicates that dreams are
not necessarily linked with REM activity
- Foulkes (1997) - children under the
age of 7 dream less that adults,
although they do have REM activity
- challenges the
activation-synthesis
principle
- Dream content
- evidence from studies of dream content undermine
the activation-synthesis hypothesis prediction that
dreams will be fragmentary and bizarre