The memory sources of dreams: serial awakenings across sleep stages and time of night

Author:

Picard-Deland Claudia1,Konkoly Karen2,Raider Rachel3ORCID,Paller Ken A2ORCID,Nielsen Tore4ORCID,Pigeon Wilfred R3ORCID,Carr Michelle3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience, University of Montreal , Montreal, Quebec , Canada

2. Department of Psychology, Northwestern University , Evanston, IL , USA

3. Department of Psychiatry, University of Rochester Medical Center , Rochester, NY , USA

4. Department of Psychiatry and Addictology, University of Montreal , Montreal, Quebec , Canada

Abstract

Abstract Memories of waking-life events are incorporated into dreams, but their incorporation is not uniform across a night of sleep. This study aimed to elucidate ways in which such memory sources vary by sleep stage and time of night. Twenty healthy participants (11 F; 24.1 ± 5.7 years) spent a night in the laboratory and were awakened for dream collection approximately 12 times spread across early, middle, and late periods of sleep, while covering all stages of sleep (N1, N2, N3, REM). In the morning, participants identified and dated associated memories of waking-life events for each dream report, when possible. The incorporation of recent memory sources in dreams was more frequent in N1 and REM than in other sleep stages. The incorporation of distant memories from over a week ago, semantic memories not traceable to a single event, and anticipated future events remained stable throughout sleep. In contrast, the relative proportions of recent versus distant memory sources changed across the night, independently of sleep stage, with late-night dreams in all stages having relatively less recent and more remote memory sources than dreams earlier in the night. Qualitatively, dreams tended to repeat similar themes across the night and in different sleep stages. The present findings clarify the temporal course of memory incorporations in dreams, highlighting a specific connection between time of night and the temporal remoteness of memories. We discuss how dream content may, at least in part, reflect the mechanisms of sleep-dependent memory consolidation.

Funder

International Association for the Study of Dreams

National Institute of General Medical Sciences

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Neurology (clinical)

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