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做夢的原因(「唯進化論」的解釋) -- R. Rettner
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Why We Dream: Real Reasons Revealed



Rachael Rettner, LiveScience Staff Writer



BOSTON - The slumbering mind might not seem like an apt tool for any critical thinking, but humans can actually solve problems while asleep, researchers say. Not only that, but one purpose for dreaming itself may be to help us find solutions to puzzles that plague us during waking hours.



Dreams are highly visual and often illogical in nature, which makes them ripe for the type of "out-of-the-box" thinking that some problem-solving requires, said Deirdre Barrett, a psychologist at Harvard University.



Barrett's theory on dreaming, which she discussed at the Association for Psychological Science meeting here last month, boils down to this: Dreaming is really just thinking, but in a slightly different state from when our eyes are open. [Why we dream is just one mystery of the mind.]



"Whatever the state we're put in, we're still working on the same problems," Barrett said. Although dreams might have initially evolved for a different purpose, they likely have been refined over time so they can serve double-duty: help the brain reboot itself and problem-solve.



Dreams and evolution



A theory to explain dreams, or any human behavior for that matter, needs to take into account evolution, Barrett said. But many early theories of dreaming either didn't address evolution at all, or downright contradicted it, she said.



For instance, Sigmund Freud proposed dreams exist to fulfill our wishes. But such gratification in an imaginary world would do little to help us adapt our instincts to the physical world, which is one key point of evolution, Barrett said.



Others have proposed dreams are more of a side effect of the sleep cycle. Dreams usually occur during Rapid Eye Movement, or REM, sleep. This stage is thought to serve several functions: to rest a part of the brain (since some areas are active while others aren't) and to replenish brain chemicals, such as neurotransmitters.



This has led some to say that dreams happen simply because REM sleep happens, Barrett said. The psychologist Steven Pinker once likened dreams to computer screen savers, saying that it perhaps
"doesn't really matter what the content is as long as certain parts of the brain are active."



However, Barrett disagrees. "My opinion is that, evolution just isn't wasteful, that when things evolve for one purpose, that generally they don't continue throughout time to have only that purpose, but anything else that may be useful about them gets refined," she said in a telephone interview with LiveScience prior to the convention.



She also noted that REM sleep has been around for quite some time, since mammals evolved some 220 million years ago. "The longer something has existed during evolutionary history, the likelier it is to have other functions overlaid on it," she said at the convention.



Problem-solving



Barrett has studied problem-solving in dreams for more than 10 years, and documented many examples of the phenomenon.



In one experiment, Barrett had college students pick a homework problem to try to solve in a dream. The problems weren't rocket science; they were fairly easy questions that the student simply hadn't gotten around to solving yet. Students focused on the problem each night before they went to bed. At the end of a week, about half the students had dreamed about the problem and about a quarter had a dream that contained the answer, Barrett said.



So at least in the cases where problems are relatively easy, some people can solve them in their sleep.



Barrett has also extensively reviewed scientific and historical literature, looking for examples of problems solved in dreams.



She found examples of almost every type of problem being solved in a dream, from the mathematical to the artistic. But many were related to problems that required individuals to visualize something in his or her mind, such as an inventor picturing a new device.



The other major category of problems solved in dreams included "ones where the conventional wisdom is just wrong about how to approach the problem," Barrett said.



Dreams might have evolved to be particularly good at allowing us to work out puzzles that fall into those two categories, she said.



"I think that dreams and REM sleep have probably further evolved to be useful for really as many of the things that our thinking is useful for," Barrett said. "It's just extra thinking time, so potentially any problem can get solved during it, but it's thinking time in the state that's very visual and looser in associations, so we've evolved to use it especially to work on those kinds of problems."





http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20100627/sc_livescience/whywedreamrealreasonsrevealed




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8種女人的夢中性愛情境大解碼 – N. Burton
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The 8 Most Common Steamy Dreams – Decoded    

 

Natasha Burton, The Cosmopolitan, 05/14/13

 

Dreaming about sex can be totally mind-blowing-or really effing creepy. According to research performed by the University of Montreal Dream and Nightmare Laboratory, eight percent of our dreams contain sexual content (though men reportedly dream about doing the nasty more frequently than we do). To help you find the meaning of your nighttime sexy-time, we've consulted the experts to decode the most common themes of x-rated dreams.

1. The Mystery Lover (神秘情人=> 自己需要強勢一點)

 

Dream expert Lauri Quinn Loewenberg, author of Dream On It, Unlock Your Dreams Change Your Life, says the most common steamy dream involves some kind of faceless dude totally ravaging us. Interestingly enough, this guy isn't some mysterious soul mate: His presence in your dreams actually signifies that you need to enlist some stereotypically masculine traits in your waking life -- i.e. be assertive and speak your mind.

2. The Big O (性高潮 => 有得意的事或慾火中燒)

 

According to analysis on DreamMoods.com, dreaming of climax-or maybe even having one-can represent an exciting end to something. But it could also mean that you've got some major sexual tension built up and just need some non-sleeping action-stat!

3. The Steamy Affair (婚外情 => 自己有罪惡感)

 

Loewenberg says that if you dream of getting it on with a dude who's not your BF, it could mean that something is going on in real life that's taking your attention away from your man. And, therefore, the twinge of guilt you feel in the dream-and when you wake from it-indicates that, deep down, you know that whatever it is you're doing doesn't quite sit well with your guy.

Related:
What Your Steamy Dreams Really Mean

4. The Same-Sex Encouter (同性做愛 => 充滿自信或自滿)

 

While having a same-sex sex dream might seem a bit, well, confusing, according to DreamMoods.com, it actually represents a greater sense of self-confidence and acceptance. So, if you dream of getting busy with another chick, you're really just showing yourself some love.

5. The Ex Sex (跟前夫或前男友做愛 => 目前的性生活無趣) 

 

Well, this is a fun one. You thought the relationship-and the feelings you had-were beyond over, but then you dream you're getting it on with him again. Loewenberg says that the most common reason we dream of a dreaded ex is because we might need to rekindle the excitement in our current intimate life, especially if we've hit in a dry spell or our current relationship has become a bit too routine.

6. The Coworker Romp (跟同事做愛 => 需要和該同事密切合作)

 

It's always fun going into work when you spent the previous night doing the nasty with a guy in the cube next to you. If you weren't crushing on him before, this dream could mean that you need to collaborate, work with or learn from the guy to get ahead, Loewenberg says. Well, a sex dream is definitely one way to get you to pay more attention to someone, that's for sure.

Related:
10 Ways To Finally Get Over Him

7. The Boss Shag (跟老闆做愛 => 自己需要更多的自主性)

 

Doesn't get much more awkward than this. Though, sex dreams are not necessarily about the person you're shagging but rather about what he or she represents, Loewenberg says. This particular one is most likely telling you that it's time to take charge somewhere in your life -- as in, you need to be the boss.

8. The Orgy (跟多人做愛 => 需要換換口味或重新安排生活) 

 

A multi-person romp could signify repressed sexual desire, according to DreamMoods.com. (Perhaps you're a bit too conservative in your sex life and need to mix things up a bit with a new position, new toy or new locale?) But this dream might not have anything to do with sex at all: It could mean that you're feeling spread too thin in your waking life and need to reprioritize where you're putting your time and energy.

Read more at Cosmopolitan.com!

 

10 Things You Don't Know About Kissing
8 Things Men Notice About You Instantly
9 Surprising Things Men Look For in a Wife
Love Making Tips from Guys

 

http://shine.yahoo.com/love-sex/8-most-common-steamy-dreams-8212-decoded-180300843.html



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腦波與fMRI的應用
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麥芽糖

不客氣。

 

請參考另一則相關報導 -- 《由腦波控制的器具》(Brain-controlled devices may help paralyzed people)。如果電腦能夠解讀腦波(大腦神經訊號) -- 一般人所謂的「心」或「心靈」 -- 則我們自然有能力透過電腦來解讀一個人的想法或企圖。

 

簡單的說,我們的想法和情緒表現於腦波的模式、強度、以及它們發生在大腦內的部位。後者可以用fMRI來觀察和測量大腦內血液及其所含氧氣的變動來推論。這是科學家能夠從fMRI圖像來解讀人們想法和情緒表現的理論及技術根據。科學家估計在2200年左右,這類技術大概能達到和目前測謊機同樣程度的應用。



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感謝
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謝謝指導:

其實 老丐有點反諷

目前科學的進步 對於腦與意識 頗有進步

不過 使用儀器 瞭解人的思想?

還有漫漫長路!




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「讀心機」已經存在
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麥芽糖

讀心機,也許稱為「意識解讀器」 「意識分析器」 比較適合,已經在實驗室研發近20年,並有一定的成果。它所使用的理論以及技術和「讀夢機」一樣,也是大腦神經學和fMRI請參考

 

* Thompson, R. F., Will the Mind Become the Brain in the 21st Century? Chapter 3 in Mind and Brain Sciences in the 21st Century, Editor, R. L. Solso, The MIT Press, 1997

 

* Gevins, A., What to Do with Your Own Personal Brain Scanner, Chapter 7 in Mind and Brain Sciences in the 21st Century, Editor, R. L. Solso, The MIT Press, 1997

 

網路上也可搜尋到各種相關資訊。



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讀心機
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呵呵!

這這些日本科學家的理論, 讀心機和讀心術, 也就是指日可待啦!




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讀夢機 - J. Stromberg
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Scientists Can See What You're Dreaming

 

Joseph Stromberg, Smithsonian, 04/05/13

 

In today’s science-so-weird-it-absolutely-must-be-science-fiction contest, we have a clear winner:

 

a new study in which a team of scientists use an MRI machine, a computer model and thousands of images from the internet to figure out what people see as they dream.

 

Unbelievable as it sounds, researchers from Kyoto, Japan, say that they’ve built something of a dream-reading machine, which learned enough about the neurological patterns of three research participants to predict their sleep time visualizations with 60 percent accuracy.

 

The study, published today in Science is believed to be the first case in which objective data has been culled about the contents of a dream.

 

The seemingly extraordinary idea is built from a straightforward concept:

 

that our brains follow predictable patterns as they react to different kinds of visual stimuli, and over time, a learning algorithm can figure out how to correlate each of these patterns with different classes of visualizations.

 

A 2005 study by one of the researchers accomplished this in a much more primitive way -- while subjects were awake -- with a learning program correctly using functional MRI readings (fMRI indicates blood flow to various parts of the brain) to determine in which direction a subject was looking.

 

This study followed the same principle but took it in a much more ambitious direction, seeking to match actual images -- not just visual directions -- with fMRI readings, and do it while the subjects were asleep.

 

The research was done on three participants, each of whom took turns sleeping in a MRI scanner for a number of 3-hour-blocks over the course of 10 days. The participants were also wired with an electroencephalography (EEG) machine, which tracks the overall level of electrical activity in the brain and was used to indicate what stage of sleep they were in.

 

The deepest, longest dreams occur during REM sleep, which typically begins after a few hours of sleeping. But quick, sporadic hallucinations also occur during stage 1 of non-REM sleep, which starts a few minutes after you drift off, and the researchers sought to track the visualizations during this stage.

 

As the fMRI monitored blood flow to different parts of the subjects’ brains, they drifted off to sleep; then, once the scientists noticed that they’d had entered stage 1, they woke them up and asked them to describe what they were previously seeing while dreaming. They repeated this process nearly 200 times for each of the participants.

 

Afterward, they recorded the 20 most common classes of items seen by each participant (“building,” “person” or “letter,” for example) and searched for photos on the Web that roughly matched the objects. They showed these images to the participants while they were awake, also in the MRI scanner, then compared the readings to the MRI readouts from when the people had seen the same objects in their dreams. This allowed them to isolate the particular brain activity patterns truly associated with seeing a given object from unrelated patterns that simply correlated with being asleep.

 

They fed all this data -- the 20 most common types of objects that each participant had seen in their dreams, as represented by thousands of images from the Web, along with the participants’ brain activity (from the MRI readouts) that occurred as a result of seeing them -- into a learning algorithm, capable of improving and refining its model based on the data. When they invited the three sleepers back into the MRI to test the newly refined algorithm, it generated videos like the one below, producing groups of related images (taken from thousands on the web) and selecting which of the 20 groups of items (the words at bottom) it thought were most likely the person was seeing, based on his or her MRI readings:

 

When they woke the subjects up this time and asked them to describe their dreams, it turned out that the machine’s predictions were better than chance, although by no means perfect. The researchers picked two classes of items -- one the dreamer had reported seeing, and one he or she hadn’t -- and checked, of the times the algorithm had reported just one of them, how often it predicted the correct one.

 

The algorithm got it right 60 percent of the time, a proportion the researchers say can’t be explained by chance. In particular, it was better at distinguishing visualizations from different categories than different images from the same category -- that is, it had a better chance of telling whether a dreamer was seeing a person or a scene, but was less accurate at guessing whether a particular scene was a building or a street.

 

Although it’s only capable of relatively crude predictions, the system demonstrates something surprising: Our dreams might seem like subjective, private experiences, but they produce objective, consistent pieces of data that can be analyzed by others. The researchers say this work could be an initial foray into scientific dream analysis, eventually allowing more sophisticated dream interpretation during deeper stages of sleep.

 

Sign up for our free email newsletter and receive the best stories from Smithsonian.com each week.

 

Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter

 

http://www.realclearscience.com/2013/04/05/scientists_can_see_what_you039re_dreaming_252345.html



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做夢的原因(大腦神經網路的解釋)
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我的解釋比較簡單。

我們做夢的原因是大腦神經網路仍然在運作。有些是由於白天現有內在神經訊號的延續,例如:

試圖解決日間沒有解決的問題;

滿足日間的憂慮,如遺失了重要事物(錢、鑰匙、眼鏡、文件等等)

這是「日有所思,夜有所夢。」的解釋。

有些則是受到外在刺激,如溫度、壓力、光線、搖動(地震)的變化或持續作用等,導致已形成的神經網路被啟動(trigger),從而產生微弱的訊號在神經細胞間傳遞。由於人在睡眠中沒有控制訊號的機制,或因訊號的強度不足,造成夢境不邏輯。其次,流闖的神經訊號同時可能啟動其他既有各個神經網路產生神經訊號,造成夢境的多樣性及快速的跳躍性(變化度)。我年輕的時候,可以使用睡姿和被窩的位置induce夢遺的發生,機率可以達到60%左右。

以上假設純屬推論,但心理學家或大腦神經學家可以設計出相關的實驗來測試/檢查夢境是否如此形成,或以上假設是否接近形成原因。



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