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                                                   How the brain                                                   turns reality                                                  into dreams                                                  Tests involving Tetris                                                   point to the role played                                                   by ‘implicit memories’                                                             By Kathleen Wren                                                                    SCIENCE
                                                                                                       WASHINGTON, Oct. 12 — Dreams make perfect      sense when you’re having them. Yet, they leave      you befuddled the next morning, wondering      “where did that come from?” The answer may      lie in the dreams of people with amnesia,      researchers report in Friday’s issue of Science.       MUCH OF THE fodder for our dreams comes from      recent experiences. For this reason, scientists have      tentatively supposed that the dreaming brain draws from its      “declarative memory” system, which includes newly learned      information.      The declarative memory stores information that you can      “declare” you know, such as the square root of nine, or the      name of your dog. Often, you can even remember when or      where you learned something — for example, the day you      discovered the harsh truth about Santa Claus. That’s called      episodic memory.      People who permanently suffer from amnesia can’t add      new declarative or episodic memories. The parts of their      brains involved in storing this type of information, primarily a      region called the hippocampus, have been damaged.      Although amnesiacs can retain new information temporarily,      they generally forget it a few minutes later.      If our dreams come from declarative memories, people      with amnesia shouldn’t dream at all, or at least dream      differently than others do. But new research directed by      Robert Stickgold of Harvard Medical School suggests quite      the opposite.       Just like people with normal memory, amnesiacs replay      recent experiences when they fall asleep, Stickgold’s study      shows. The only difference seems to be that the amnesiacs      don’t recognize what they’re dreaming about.        DREAMING OF TETRIS        Can you analyze your      own dreams?       I can figure out most      of them.       I can't figure out      most of them.       I don't remember my      dreams.       None of the above      (share your view on      the Science BBS).       Vote to see results        Every day, the people in the study played several hours      of the computer game Tetris, which requires directing falling      blocks into the correct positions as they reach the bottom of      the screen. At night, the amnesiacs didn’t remember playing      the game. But, they did describe seeing falling, rotating      blocks while they were falling asleep.      A second group of players with normal memories      reported seeing the same images.       Therefore, Stickgold’s research team concluded,      dreams must come from the types of memory amnesiacs do      have, which are called “implicit memories.” These are      memories that scientists can measure even when individuals      don’t know that they have them.      One class of implicit memories is found in the      procedural memory system, which stores information that      you use without really being able to say how you know      what you’re doing. When you ride a bicycle for the first time      in years, or type on a keyboard without looking, you’re      relying on procedural memory.      Another type of implicit memory uses “semantic”      knowledge, and resides in different parts of the brain,      including a region called the neocortex. Semantic      knowledge involves general, abstract concepts. Both groups      of Tetris players, for example, only described seeing blocks,      falling and rotating, and evidently did not see a desk, room,      or computer screen, or feel their fingers on the keyboard.      Without help from the hippocampus, new semantic      memories are too weak to be intentionally recalled. But they      can still affect your behavior — for example, causing you to      buy a certain brand of something you saw in an      advertisement you don’t remember.       In contrast, the information in episodic memories is      associated with specific      times, places or events.      Without these “anchors”      to reality, it’s no wonder      that dreams are so      illogical and full of      discontinuity, the study’s      authors say.      Stickgold believes that dreams serve a purpose for the      brain, allowing it to make necessary emotional connections      among new pieces of information.       “Dreams let you consolidate and integrate your      experiences, without conflict with other input from real life,”      Stickgold said. “Dreaming is like saying, ‘I’m going home,      disconnecting the phone, nobody talk to me. I have to do      work.’”      Because the hippocampus seems to be inaccessible for      this “off-line” memory processing, the brain may use the      abstract information in the neocortex instead.       According to Stickgold’s theory, dreaming is like      choosing an outfit by reaching into bins labeled “shirts,”      “pants” and so on. You’ll rummage up something to wear,      but it won’t be a perfectly matching ensemble.       SLEEP’S EARLIEST IMAGES      The period of sleep that Stickgold’s team studied is      called “hypnagogia.” It’s an in-between state between being      fully awake and fully asleep. Many people who have just      had an intense new experience of some kind, either mental      or physical, often report replays of that experience during      this stage.       Advertisement       In his poem, “After Apple Picking,” for example,      Robert Frost describes seeing the apples and apple      blossoms, and feeling the ladder sway as he nods off to      sleep. Stickgold’s first encounter with this phenomenon      occurred after a day of mountain climbing, when he felt the      sensation of rocks under his fingertips as he fell asleep.      Hypnagogic sleep is different from REM sleep, the      period marked by rapid eye movement, when standard      dreams most often occur. According to Stickgold, other      studies suggest that the hippocampus isn’t active during      REM sleep either. Therefore, he proposes, the brain activity      responsible for the Tetris images is probably similar to the      dreaming that occurs in REM sleep.      Interpreting REM sleep dreams, however, is a highly      subjective process.      “What’s so nice about the images in our experiments is      that they are so accurately re-creating the Tetris experience.      There’s no interpretation necessary,” Stickgold said.        © 2000 by the American Association for the      Advancement of Science |