Dreaming Music, Dream Music, Healing Deep Sleep Music, Lucid Dreaming / Delta Waves New Age Music - Video
PUBLISHED:  Dec 05, 2016
DESCRIPTION:
Dreaming Music

Everything we see, imagine, or think about is linked to neural responses somewhere in the brain. Dreams also have a home. Neural activity in the primary sensory areas of the neocortex produces the impression of sensory perception. This means that neurons firing in the primary visual cortex create the illusion of seeing things, neurons firing in the primary auditory area create the illusion of hearing things, and so forth. If that firing occurs at random, these perceptions can feel like crazy, randomly fragmented hallucinations. It is easy to imagine that the random imagery and sensations created in this way could be woven together to create a complex, multisensory hallucination which we might call a dream.

Memories in Dreams
What's the most recent dream you can remember? Was anyone you know in it? Did it happen in a place you know well? Were you doing something familiar? Most dreams incorporate fragments of experiences from our waking lives. It's common to dream about disconnected snippets like a particular person, place, or activity. But do dreams ever replay complete memories-for instance, the last time you saw your mother, including the place, activities, and people? Memories like this are called episodic because they represent whole episodes instead of just fragments; studies the secret world of sleep of dreaming show that these types of memories are sometimes replayed in sleep, but it is quite rare (around 2 percent of dreams contain such memories, according to one study). Most of our dreams just recombine fragments of waking life. These fragments are relatively familiar and reflect the interests and concerns of the dreamer. This means cyclists dream about cycling, teachers dream about teaching, and bankers dream about money.

Some researchers have capitalized upon dream reports to gain insight into the process by which memories are immediately incorporated (i.e., in the first night after they were initially experienced). Freud famously referred to this as "day-residues." One study showed day residues appear in 65 to 70 percent of single dream reports. On the other hand, a more recently described phenomenon called the dream-lag effect refers to the extraordinary observation that, after its initial appearance as a day residue, the likelihood that a specific memory will be incorporated into dreams decreases steadily across the next few nights after the memory was formed, then increases again across the following few nights

Why Do We Have Different Kinds of Dreams at Different Stages of the Night?
Dreams aren't all the same. Everyone is aware of the difference between good and bad dreams, but we don't tend to notice that some dreams are more logical and structured while others are more bizarre. Some dreams are so highly realistic that it is difficult to convince ourselves they aren't real, while others are fuzzy and indistinct. Some dreams are fragmented, jumping rapidly from one topic to another, while others move forward in a more coherent story. Recent analyses have suggested that these differences are far from random; instead they may be driven by the physiology of various brain states and the extent to which structures like the hippocampus and neocortex are in communication during different sleep stages.
Dreams occur in all stages

We provide relaxing music, meditation music, deep sleep music since 2007.

http://www.contimusic.com
http://www.facebook.com/contimusic
http://www.instagram.com/tomcontimusic

#dream
#dreamingmusic
#dreammusic
#chakra
#newage
#anxiety
#reduceanxiety
#peacefulmusic

Title: Dreaming Music, Dream Music, Healing Deep Sleep Music, Lucid Dreaming / Delta Waves New Age Music 2016

Happy Dreaming :)
follow us on Twitter      Contact      Privacy Policy      Terms of Service
Copyright © BANDMINE // All Right Reserved
Return to top