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Theories of Dreaming
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Published on Feb 04, 2016
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1.
Theories of Dreaming
by Bridget Gile
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nosha
2.
Leading Explanations
Dreams as Unconscious Wishes
Dreams as Reflections of Current Concerns
Dreams as a By-product of Mental Housekeeping
Dreams as Interpreted Brain Activity
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bedzine
3.
Dreams as Unconscious Wishes
Freud believed that in dreams, we express our unconscious desires, often sexual or violent
Every dream is meaningful
Thoughts and objects are represented symbolically
Manifest (conscious) vs. latent (hidden) content
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One From RM
4.
Reflections of Current Concerns
Dreams reflect conscious preoccupations of waking life
Problem-focused explanation means that symbols convey meaning directly
Supported by observation that dreams often relate to current concerns ("examination dreams" in students)
Dreaming about a waking problem can help resolve it
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Benson Kua
5.
Mental Housekeeping
Physiological explanation
Dreams occurs as the brain eliminates unnecessary neural connections and strengthens others
Dreams are snippets recalled from the sorting and assimilation of new information, a process that occurs during sleep
REM sleep has a big impact on memory
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Void Blatherer
6.
Interpreted Brain Activity
Activation-synthesis theory explains that dreams are merely the synthesis and interpretation of spontaneous neural activity
Random firing of signals accounts for bizarre nature of many dreams
Signals from the part of the brain that handles balance might cause a dream about falling
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alles-schlumpf
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