Lucid Dreamers Navigate Remote-Controlled Car
Lucid dreamers successfully controlled a remote-controlled car using dream-state muscle activity.
Lucid dreamers successfully controlled a remote-controlled car using dream-state muscle activity.
Recent studies reveal advancements in understanding lucid dreaming, memory replay during sleep, the mental health benefits of sleep, its role in preventing neurodegenerative diseases, and new treatments like cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia.
New research sheds light on the influence of dreams on daily work attitudes and actions.
Read MoreWith further development, the technology could allow people to control dream plots and induce lucid dreams, according to REMspace researchers.
Read MoreThe purpose of REM eye movements has remained a matter of much debate.
Read MoreRichmond Magazine: Scientists tap into the dreamscape, learning what they are, what they do, and how we might be able to control them.
Read MoreThe Guardian reviews Brazilian neuroscientist Sidarta Ribeiro’s new book, The Oracle of Night, which looks at the history of dream research.
Read MoreScientists are increasingly making a connection between lucid dreaming and mental health.
Read MoreThe paper is unusual in that it includes four independently conducted experiments using different approaches to achieve a similar goal.
Read MoreA writer for USA Today explains how she tried to fix bad dreams brought on by the coronavirus age.
Read MoreA pilot study shows how lucid dreaming impacts insomnia and mood symptoms, reports Psychology Today.
Read MoreNightmares are a frequent symptom of narcolepsy, and lucid dreaming—being aware of the dream state while dreaming—is known to be effective in nightmare therapy.
Read MoreResults showed that frequent lucid dreamers solved 25% more of the insight problems than the non-lucid dreamers.
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