Recent research in the neurobiology of dreaming sleep provides new
evidence for possible structural and functional substrates of formal
aspects of the dream process. The data suggest that dreaming sleep is
physiologically determined and shaped by a brain stem neuronal mechanism
that can be modeled physiologically and mathematically. Formal features of
the generator processes with strong implications for dream theory include
periodicity and automaticity of forebrain activation, suggesting a
preprogrammed neural basis for dream mentation in sleep; intense and
sporadic activation of brain stem sensorimotor circuits including
reticular, oculomotor, and vestibular neurons, possibly determining
spatiotemporal aspects of dream imagery; and shifts in transmitter ratios,
possibly accounting for dream amnesia. The authors suggest that the
automatically activated forebrain synthesizes the dream by comparing
information generated in specific brain stem circuits with information
stored in memory.
Abstract Teaser