Graeme M said:
In other words, wouldn't the physical mechanism for "seeing" dreams deeply implicate the hippocampus and related memory processes?
Graeme M said:
Seeing involves processing of sensory input through a defined sequence of visual centres with plenty of feedback and input from other regions to arrive at a presented representation in consciousness, whereas dreaming activates some of these areas to retrieve stored representations which are then represented to consciousness.
You're correct that the hippocampus is involved in dreaming, along with the rest of the limbic system; however the simple notion of dividing seeing into active seeing, when there is input from the eyes, versus passive retrieval of stored images, when there is no input from the eyes, is insufficient for explaining vision and/or visual imagery in dreams. Remember that we can imagine (whether our eyes are open or closed) infinitely many things we have never seen; this supports what I dimly recall from my prior reading, which is that visual imagination does not rely solely on literal memories; rather, the system as a whole has the ability to create entirely new composite images that make use of the same
qualities of images our brain learned to process when we were very young & our vision was still forming: e.g. motion, form, color, brightness, edges, etc. - I don't know all the right terms, but the categories are quite elaborate. (And interestingly, it is these categories of processing that
give rise to optical illusions). This is not to say that we don't remember images themselves; we do; but recall is not the only process involved in vision in dreams. So when thinking of image qualities or categories, these are not "memories" but more like "capabilities" that enable meaningful perception.
But regardless, thanks for posting your thoughts; you got my own curiosity going again on what you rightly say is a very interesting topic. Since my books on vision are still misplaced, I made another try at digging up relevant information online. I found a simple "explainer" website about the brain,
The Brain From Top To Bottom; it was developed by a Canadian neuroscientist, Bruno Dubuc, and sponsored by McGill University, in Quebec. In 2005 the site
received an award from MERLOT for outstanding public education, so I think it has credibility. Anyway to quote from the
page on brain function during sleeping:
Brain imaging studies have found, for example, that the
primary visual cortex, the first part of the brain involved in consciously decoding visual signals when people are awake, shows very little activity when they are dreaming during REM sleep. This is no surprise—when people are dreaming, their eyes are closed, and no visual signals are reaching them.
But brain imaging studies have also shown that certain
extrastriate visual areas of the cortex, which decode complex visual scenes, are significantly more active during REM sleep. Thus, during REM sleep, these areas are apparently involved in analyzing complex visual scenes. This is completely consistent with the often highly elaborate visual dream scenes that people report when researchers awaken them from REM sleep.
During REM sleep, intense activity is also observed in the
limbic system, a set of structures heavily involved in emotions. Two of these structures are especially active: the
hippocampal region and, in particular, the
http://thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/d/d_04/d_04_cr/d_04_cr_peu/d_04_cr_peu.htm. Once again, it is interesting to note that this intense limbic activity does not occur during the phases of
non-REM sleep, when the dreams that people have are far less emotional.
You can find more information on these "extrastriate visual areas" via the links in the excerpt above; and also in
Wikipedia's article on the visual cortex. A crude way of putting it is that the primary visual cortex, also known as V1, begins the processing of the most essential aspects of vision, e.g. detecting motion and recognizing patterns; areas V2 through V5 deal with further aspects. All this accords with what I have read in the little book I recommended to the OP,
Dreaming: A Very Short Introduction, by the researcher J. Alan Hobson, as well as other sources; Hobson calls these additional visual areas in the brain "associative" to distinguish them from primary.
So back to the question of memory as a basis for seeing in dreams: From the reading I've managed to do, one model being used these days has to do with "encodings" of images or image qualities which have been previously processed by the various secondary areas of the visual cortex mentioned above. These days, with fMRI machines running around loose looking for expensive projects to do, apparently research has turned to some pretty interesting ways of looking at such encodings. Specifically, I found at least two studies that use fMRI and computerized algorithms called "decoders" to explore visual encodings in dreams; very technical, but fortunately I also found a couple of blog posts where others who follow this kind of research explain the studies in language suited for laypersons.
In closing, here are links for one of these studies, "Neural Decoding of Visual Imagery During Sleep"; it was first published in
Science, May 3, 2013:
I'll leave it at that for now. I'll be interested to see what the OP comes up with in his own reading later on.