What evidence supports the hypothesis that dreams are false memories?

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In summary: This still doesn't make much sense to me.His paper is only a page long, so I'm not sure how much more detail he could provide to make his point more clear.I'm not sure what you are asking.
  • #36
ryan_m_b said:
Wikipedia has an excellent summary section on the neurobiology of dreaming http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream#The_Neurobiology_of_dreaming

This isn't an area of science that has gone unstudied! There is a hefty amount of evidence that indicates that we dream in real time, not retrospectively.

I think we are getting further and further from the OPs comments however

Agreed. I think we're just trying to "fill in the gaps" and make the idea work now by adding some extra details here and there.
 
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  • #37
I'm still confused about how we have a neurobiological idea of subjective experience at all, dreaming or not.

NCCs?
 
  • #38
Pythagorean said:
I'm still confused about how we have a neurobiological idea of subjective experience at all, dreaming or not.

NCCs?

What are you seeing as subjective?

The dreams may be subjective, but the mechanisms behind them can certainly be studied and put into theory.
 
  • #39
JaredJames said:
What are you seeing as subjective?

The dreams may be subjective, but the mechanisms behind them can certainly be studied and put into theory.

ignore dreams for a second, and consider all cognitive sciences. Do we really know what mechanisms underlie subjective experience in the first place? We know the functional aspects from a behavioral perspective, but phenomenological studies are only just now (i.e. last 20-30 years) beginning to relate to neural events to phenomenology.

The really fundamental problem is that we don't have a theory of how subjective experience arises from matter. We have been working on the problem more and more in the last decades, and we have learned a lot (like that we're terrible eye-witnesses, and have a 'subjective' idea of time and space) so I'm not saying that it's a completely void topic! In fact, this is it's central question, so once it's been answered and verified, there won't be as much pioneering work to do anymore. Right now, it's in pioneer age.

Of course, we could replace 'subjective' with 'processed' and avoid the phenomenology, but then we're not even asking the same question anymore. The question is more about what information processing principles apply to subjective experience. Is there anything consistent in the dynamics or the neural population for all subjective experiences? Does it go beyond neural dynamics to other signaling processes and cells in the body? Is there something that we can look at a live fMRI of somebody and guess what they're experiencing and when they're experiencing it?

I would criticize Dennet for not having evidence, but I wouldn't claim that we actually have counter-evidence. That seems just as naive as Dennet's claim.

Even if you take a completely functionalist approach, there are still lots of problems and ambiguities with how neural processing actually works in large-scale networks, see:

Marder, E. & Taylor, T.L. (2011) Multiple models to capture the variability in biological neurons and networks, 14(2), 133-138.

The above is a constructive analysis of how (I think) models should be approached when modeling complex biological systems. In fact, since reading this paper, I am obligated to now do this analysis on my own network models.

But this is a fundamentally important statistical concept to any claims made about biological systems.
 
  • #40
Pythagorean said:
I would criticize Dennet for not having evidence, but I wouldn't claim that we actually have counter-evidence. That seems just as naive as Dennet's claim.

With respect I don't think we need to have a comprehensive idea of how consciousness arises before we can counter Dennet's claim. We know that brainwaves go through cycles, we know from waking patients and observing their behaviour that dreaming happens during specific parts of these cycles, we know that patients can move their body and physically react (talk/walk/scream) in their sleep and later tell us about a dream that matches these observations. I think there is more evidence that dreams are experienced in real time over retrospective memory.
 
  • #41
ryan_m_b said:
With respect I don't think we need to have a comprehensive idea of how consciousness arises before we can counter Dennet's claim. We know that brainwaves go through cycles, we know from waking patients and observing their behaviour that dreaming happens during specific parts of these cycles, we know that patients can move their body and physically react (talk/walk/scream) in their sleep and later tell us about a dream that matches these observations. I think there is more evidence that dreams are experienced in real time over retrospective memory.

That sounds like good evidence for a special case of dreaming called lucid dreaming. I'm no sleep expert, admittedly, and I've never experienced lucid dreaming, but I didn't think that was the normal kind of dream.

What are normal dreams? I guess I always assumed they were the kind I have: bits and pieces that I spend the first minute of the morning putting together... how much do I implant memories about the dream at that point while trying to make a story out of random, incongruent experiences in the first minute of wakefulness or the transient moment from sleep to wake?

addendum:

another reason I'm skeptical of your claim that we can correlate behavior with subjective experience is that I talk in my sleep but I don't remember my dreams (except for when I'm on a boat, floating in the Bering Sea, then I experience all kinds of vivid dreams for some reason).

Are you claiming that when I don't "remember" dreams, I subjectively experienced a dream, but that I "forgot" about it before I woke up? Or did I ever really experience them? How could you measure that?
 
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  • #42
Pythagorean said:
addendum:

another reason I'm skeptical of your claim that we can correlate behavior with subjective experience is that I talk in my sleep but I don't remember my dreams (except for when I'm on a boat, floating in the Bering Sea, then I experience all kinds of vivid dreams for some reason).

Are you claiming that when I don't "remember" dreams, I subjectively experienced a dream, but that I "forgot" about it before I woke up? Or did I ever really experience them? How could you measure that?

It's a good point. I don't think we have a conclusive understanding of dreams but I think the evidence points more to a real-time experience over retrospective. I have experienced others talking in their sleep but after immediately waking up having no memory. I have also experienced the opposite where people talk in their sleep and after immediately waking up have matched the talk to something going on in their dreams.

Funnily enough last night I tripped in a dream and woke up because I had kicked my legs out to stop my self falling. Things like this have happened to me many times (once I cut my head open banging it on my wall because in my dream I was trying to duck under a low ceiling) but I've only just thought about how that would indicate real-time dreaming.
 
  • #43
I saw something on sleep the other day and it spoke about memories being formed.

They discussed people who are woken quickly from certain stages of sleep, for example by a phone call, speak on the phone and then go back to sleep. In the morning, they have no recollection of the phone call.

It's something to do with memories not forming immediately or not having time to be processed before you go back to sleep and so it just never gets committed.

So the idea that memories could form coming out of sleep in such a quick manner (such as when you're suddenly woken and remembering a dream you were just having) seems a bit dubious, given it doesn't happen the other way around. I know it's not conclusive, but it doesn't help the case.

It was an interesting programme, I'll see if I can dig it up.
 
  • #44
I remember when I was younger, I'd have dreams of falling and I'd wake up as I hit, trying to distribute my weight across the bed. I was taking Tang Soo Do class in which we did falling practice. I'd wake up every time doing some half-atrophied attempt at the proper landing motions. Don't remember much else of a dream, though.

But on the boat when I had vivid dreams, if I wake up from a dream, I'll often try to get the dream back as I go back to sleep, which does imply real-time experience.

How real-time is real-time actually experience? Our eyes exhibit saccades, our visual and audio processing have different time scales, yet we experience a smooth transition from one moment to the next, auditory, visual, and somatic input all synchronized as the information is integrated in the hippocampus (the following paper concludes that the hippocampal binding is indeed tied to the subjective experience, not just an objective binding):

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19786107

Dreaming is what, then? information flow from the hippocampus to the cortex; how does it integrate itself temporally (in a real time manner?) are their similar studies and models as the above on dreams? Is there an "unbinding" problem?
 
  • #45
JaredJames said:
I saw something on sleep the other day and it spoke about memories being formed.

They discussed people who are woken quickly from certain stages of sleep, for example by a phone call, speak on the phone and then go back to sleep. In the morning, they have no recollection of the phone call.

It's something to do with memories not forming immediately or not having time to be processed before you go back to sleep and so it just never gets committed.

So the idea that memories could form coming out of sleep in such a quick manner (such as when you're suddenly woken and remembering a dream you were just having) seems a bit dubious, given it doesn't happen the other way around. I know it's not conclusive, but it doesn't help the case.

It was an interesting programme, I'll see if I can dig it up.

That is interesting, especially compared to the research I presented in my last post. If you actually experienced it, but you don't remember it, was the memory not stored in hippocampus? If it wasn't stored in hippocampus, yet you still experienced it, doesn't that threaten the hippocampal binding hypothesis?

Or does your body have an autopilot that doesn't always wake you, can it store procedural memories as slow reflexes? Is that how unconscious sleep-taskers arise, quarky wiring in the autopilot function? I know I can occasionally drive home and not remember the drive. Did I ever experience it? Maybe minimally, as a background, but I was experiencing abstract thoughts, memories, and musings mostly. My autopilot utilized my visual, audio, procedural memory, and got me home safely while I strategized about my to-do list or just wandered off in any random direction of thought.
 
  • #46
Pythagorean said:
I remember when I was younger, I'd have dreams of falling and I'd wake up as I hit, trying to distribute my weight across the bed. I was taking Tang Soo Do class in which we did falling practice. I'd wake up every time doing some half-atrophied attempt at the proper landing motions. Don't remember much else of a dream, though.

But on the boat when I had vivid dreams, if I wake up from a dream, I'll often try to get the dream back as I go back to sleep, which does imply real-time experience.

How real-time is real-time actually experience? Our eyes exhibit saccades, our visual and audio processing have different time scales, yet we experience a smooth transition from one moment to the next, auditory, visual, and somatic input all synchronized as the information is integrated in the hippocampus (the following paper concludes that the hippocampal binding is indeed tied to the subjective experience, not just an objective binding):

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19786107

Dreaming is what, then? information flow from the hippocampus to the cortex; how does it integrate itself temporally (in a real time manner?) are their similar studies and models as the above on dreams? Is there an "unbinding" problem?

The implication of real time is that the experience is actually happening at the same speed as the bedside clock is ticking. Where the information is coming from (and how hippocampus activity relates to this) is still unknown, clearly the information is not actually coming from the senses. The problem with attempting what the above mentioned paper investigated on dreamers is that the methodology of that paper required people to be awake and looking at objects/pictures. When examining differently presented objects the role of the hippocampus can be partially elucidated but I don't now how that could apply to dreaming.
 
  • #47
Pythagorean said:
That is interesting, especially compared to the research I presented in my last post. If you actually experienced it, but you don't remember it, was the memory not stored in hippocampus? If it wasn't stored in hippocampus, yet you still experienced it, doesn't that threaten the hippocampal binding hypothesis?

Or does your body have an autopilot that doesn't always wake you, can it store procedural memories as slow reflexes? Is that how unconscious sleep-taskers arise, quarky wiring in the autopilot function? I know I can occasionally drive home and not remember the drive. Did I ever experience it? Maybe minimally, as a background, but I was experiencing abstract thoughts, memories, and musings mostly. My autopilot utilized my visual, audio, procedural memory, and got me home safely while I strategized about my to-do list or just wandered off in any random direction of thought.

It's very interesting, I'm still trying to dig it out. It might have been part of a larger programme.

I only remember that snippet, the basis of it was that there's no time or *something* isn't happening to commit those items to memory.

I've certainly experienced this sort of thing (being woken, doing something minor such as answering the phone and falling back to sleep in the space of a few seconds / minutes).
 
  • #48
Jared: I helped my dad catch a stray cat that got into our house in my sleep and didn't remember it the next morning. Apparently he chased it into my room, I sat up, he handed me a big tote and grabbed the cat, shoved it in, capped the tote and I passed back out. So it's not like I was running around actively chasing a cat, but still the kind of novelty you'd think you'd remember.

ryan: that's pretty much the point I'm trying to make. We still have a lot of work connecting subjective consciousness to behavior; we still have to rely on reliable reporting. Behavior that occurs during consciousness can occur during unconsciousness if it's already ingrained in implicit procedural memory.

I hope I don't sound fatalistic, I don't think the research is pointless or anything, just that we have to be critical of what the ncc's are since we still don't have a reliable consciousness test or mechanism.

Does C. Elegans have a subjective experience? What about plants and bacteria? How about single-celled eukaryotes?
 
  • #49
Pythagorean said:
Dreaming is what, then? information flow from the hippocampus to the cortex; how does it integrate itself temporally (in a real time manner?) are their similar studies and models as the above on dreams? Is there an "unbinding" problem?

Not arguing against you here, but how would you imagine sensations which were not temporal? I think there are good reasons for why the dream sensations organize themselves spatially and temporally - we simply cannot experience differently.
 
  • #50
Jarle said:
Not arguing against you here, but how would you imagine sensations which were not temporal? I think there are good reasons for why the dream sensations organize themselves spatially and temporally - we simply cannot experience differently.

it's not that the sensations aren't temporal, it's that there's (in some cases, I guess) not congruent, chronological story in the first place, just random fragments. In the short seconds waking up is when we force them into a meaningful and continuous picture and possibly implant memories to make them work. And the dreams aren't long either. A series of a couple images, really, but each image is rich with context that can be explained with language so a seemingly long story is interpreted.

Of course, I don't deny that there could be a transitional state between asleep and awake that people experience. I've drifted in and out of vivid dreams before.

Does anyone else experience the fragmented precepts I speak of? I always thought it was the most common kind of dream.
 
  • #51
Pythagorean said:
Does anyone else experience the fragmented precepts I speak of? I always thought it was the most common kind of dream.

All my dreams are like video as opposed to pictures.

There is sometimes only fragments, but I always experience what feels like a few minutes worth through to a full 'event'.
 
  • #52
JaredJames said:
All my dreams are like video as opposed to pictures.

There is sometimes only fragments, but I always experience what feels like a few minutes worth through to a full 'event'.

My dreams are never fragments, they are always long continuous story arcs. If I don't think them too much I forget but upon waking I can run through the dream from start to finish. The only discontinuities are when I wake
 
  • #53
ryan_m_b said:
My dreams are never fragments, they are always long continuous story arcs. If I don't think them too much I forget but upon waking I can run through the dream from start to finish. The only discontinuities are when I wake

When I say fragments, I mean it's like a break in the story. It'll jump forward like a chapter skip in a DVD.

The whole story is there, I just miss bits sometimes. But the whole 'outline' for it exists.
 
  • #54
It is entirely plausible that our mind connects these fragmental sensations into one coherent and continuous story. One doesn't know that the dream was like a "video", since our mind automatically fill in these gaps (sort of like the blind spot of the eye), and we can't know for sure what was dreamed and what was filled in, no matter how convinced we are.

Even in ordinary life experiences our mind strives to make sense of it all (the sensations), it orders and structures them into a coherent pattern. Bad eye-witnesses of crime scenes is a good example of this. Some can remain absolutely convinced of their perspective of the details of what happened, even though they are entirely wrong. The important part is that they remember it, even though it never happened. It is all due to how we subconsciously force incoherence into coherence.
 
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  • #55
My dreams seem to string together, even though there are often "scene cuts" (which I think is really a transition from one dream fragment to another). These transitions seem normal when I'm dreaming them, and even when I'm rerunning the dream upon awakening, but they are the hardest part to describe when recounting the dream later. In my head it's a smooth flow, but the words are always "... and then I was ... sort of ... over here..." Like I lose the ability to describe something I'm thinking of.
 
  • #56
i see patterns in my dreams that resemble waking processes. like being in a rush to get something done and forgetting a key element. in the dream it plays out over a few minutes with completely different images and story line. however in real life it may take weeks to fully happen. i was building a housing complex and had skipped framing a few things for speed so we could get the roof on. costly but necessary. the dreams i had during those weeks were filled with worry and forgeting things. none had to do with building.
 
  • #57
DaveC426913 said:
My dreams seem to string together, even though there are often "scene cuts" (which I think is really a transition from one dream fragment to another). These transitions seem normal when I'm dreaming them, and even when I'm rerunning the dream upon awakening, but they are the hardest part to describe when recounting the dream later. In my head it's a smooth flow, but the words are always "... and then I was ... sort of ... over here..." Like I lose the ability to describe something I'm thinking of.

Yeah, this is close to what I experience. Visually, they're scene cuts, buts there's an overall... eh, emotional feeling or something that sets the context. There's usually no audio, but a word might be prevalent, or a character might speak one word that will somehow string (or be strung upon recall) into the overarching emotional context.

In retrospect, it seems like it only takes something like ten seconds to go through this series, but much more time (minutes) to interpret it (which is where there's room for implanting false memories). I can't tell, either, whether it's really a series or it arrives randomly and gets ordered by a higher process? It seems like if it was really a series, it would be more congruent and a lower level, but it's only congruent on the interpretation level in my case.

I'll also woken up thinking my dreams actually happened for a couple seconds.
 
  • #58
I thought of writing this before Pythagorean posted, but was called away, so it might be a bit repetitive, but if they are what they seem, I have different types of dreams, including fragments, ones that stream, ones that can be forwarded and rewound, etc. Of those that seem to stream in a logical sequence of events, upon recalling them, the logic is not always so sound.

Regarding the op, I’ve thought of some more anecdotes to confuse the issue :).
On the side of dreams occurring during sleep, there is the incorporation of external sounds into dreams, interpreted as something different. For example, foxes will actually be crying outside, and I’ll dream I’m on an island where mutton birds are calling. The sounds outside may finish before I wake, and without knowledge of them, I’ll have recalled a dream with strange sounds.

However, I think I’ve also incorporated the sounds of an alarm or telephone ring that could only have just occurred into detailed, convoluted dreams, just prior to waking. As well, the sounds can seem to occur at the “right” moment (e.g. I dream I flick the car radio on immediately followed by the actual alarm music sounds) giving me the impression, once awake, that the dream may contain some retrospective elements.
 
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<h2>1. What is the evidence that supports the hypothesis that dreams are false memories?</h2><p>There are several pieces of evidence that support the hypothesis that dreams are false memories. One is that dreams often contain elements that are illogical or impossible in real life, which suggests that they are not based on actual memories. Additionally, studies have shown that dreams can be influenced by external factors such as sounds or images, further supporting the idea that they are not purely based on real memories.</p><h2>2. How do false memories play a role in dreams?</h2><p>False memories are thought to play a role in dreams by creating a narrative or storyline that is not based on actual events. This can happen when our brains mix together fragments of real memories with imagined or fabricated elements, resulting in a dream that feels like a memory but is not entirely accurate.</p><h2>3. Can dreams be used as evidence in court cases?</h2><p>No, dreams are not considered reliable evidence in court cases. This is because they are not based on concrete, verifiable events and can be influenced by external factors or personal biases. Dreams are also subjective and can be interpreted differently by different individuals, making them unreliable as evidence.</p><h2>4. Is there any scientific proof that dreams are false memories?</h2><p>While there is no definitive scientific proof that dreams are false memories, there is a significant amount of research and evidence that supports this hypothesis. However, the exact nature and purpose of dreams are still not fully understood, and more research is needed to fully validate this theory.</p><h2>5. What are some potential implications of the hypothesis that dreams are false memories?</h2><p>If the hypothesis that dreams are false memories is true, it could have significant implications for our understanding of memory and the way our brains process and store information. It could also impact the way we interpret and analyze dreams, as well as how we use them in fields such as therapy or criminal investigations.</p>

1. What is the evidence that supports the hypothesis that dreams are false memories?

There are several pieces of evidence that support the hypothesis that dreams are false memories. One is that dreams often contain elements that are illogical or impossible in real life, which suggests that they are not based on actual memories. Additionally, studies have shown that dreams can be influenced by external factors such as sounds or images, further supporting the idea that they are not purely based on real memories.

2. How do false memories play a role in dreams?

False memories are thought to play a role in dreams by creating a narrative or storyline that is not based on actual events. This can happen when our brains mix together fragments of real memories with imagined or fabricated elements, resulting in a dream that feels like a memory but is not entirely accurate.

3. Can dreams be used as evidence in court cases?

No, dreams are not considered reliable evidence in court cases. This is because they are not based on concrete, verifiable events and can be influenced by external factors or personal biases. Dreams are also subjective and can be interpreted differently by different individuals, making them unreliable as evidence.

4. Is there any scientific proof that dreams are false memories?

While there is no definitive scientific proof that dreams are false memories, there is a significant amount of research and evidence that supports this hypothesis. However, the exact nature and purpose of dreams are still not fully understood, and more research is needed to fully validate this theory.

5. What are some potential implications of the hypothesis that dreams are false memories?

If the hypothesis that dreams are false memories is true, it could have significant implications for our understanding of memory and the way our brains process and store information. It could also impact the way we interpret and analyze dreams, as well as how we use them in fields such as therapy or criminal investigations.

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