The neuropsychology of REM sleep dreaming
- 1 February 1998
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in NeuroReport
- Vol. 9 (3) , R1-R14
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001756-199802160-00033
Abstract
RECENT PET imaging and brain lesion studies in humans are integrated with new basic research findings at the cellular level in animals to explain how the formal cognitive features of dreaming may be the combined product of a shift in neuromodulatory balance of the brain and a related redistribution of regional blood flow. The human PET data indicate a preferential activation in REM of the pontine brain stem and of limbic and paralimbic cortical structures involved in mediating emotion and a corresponding deactivation of dorsolateral prefrontal cortical structures involved in the executive and mnemonic aspects of cognition. The pontine brainstem mechanisms controlling the neuromodulatory balance of the brain in rats and cats include noradrenergic and serotonergic influences which enhance waking and impede REM via anticholinergic mechanisms and cholinergic mechanisms which are essential to REM sleep and only come into full play when the serotonergic and noradrenergic systems are inhibited. In REM, the brain thus becomes activated but processes its internally generated data in a manner quite different from that of waking.Keywords
This publication has 105 references indexed in Scilit:
- Are there cholinergic and non-cholinergic paradoxical sleep-on neurones in the pons?NeuroReport, 1996
- An integrative analysis to sleep functionsBehavioural Brain Research, 1995
- Sleep: Sleep the Beloved Teacher?Current Biology, 1995
- Kainate receptorsNeuroReport, 1995
- Behavioral state-related changes of extracellular serotonin concentration in the dorsal raphe nucleus: a microdialysis study in the freely moving catBrain Research, 1994
- Enhancement of acetylcholine release during paradoxical sleep in the dorsal tegmental field of the cat brain stemNeuroscience Letters, 1990
- Significance and Remembrance: The Role of Neuromodulatory SystemsPsychological Science, 1990
- Dreaming and consciousnessThe European Journal of Cognitive Psychology, 1990
- Dream Bizarreness as the Cognitive Correlate of Altered Neuronal Behavior in REM SleepJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 1989
- Molecular Biology of Learning: Modulation of Transmitter ReleaseScience, 1982