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Dreams and sleep: Are new schemas revealing?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 September 2001

Peter J. Morgane
Affiliation:
Department of Pharmacology, University of New England, Biddeford, ME 04005 dmokler@mailbox.une.edu www.une.edu
David J. Mokler
Affiliation:
Department of Pharmacology, University of New England, Biddeford, ME 04005 dmokler@mailbox.une.edu www.une.edu

Abstract

In this series of articles, several new hypotheses on sleep and dreaming are presented. In each case, we feel the data do not adequately support the hypothesis. In their lengthy discourse, Hobson et al. represent to us the familiar reciprocal interaction model dressed in new clothes, but expanded beyond reasonable testability. Vertes & Eastman have proposed that REM sleep is not involved in memory consolidation. However, we do not find their arguments persuasive in that limited differences in activity in REM and waking do not lend credence to the idea that memory consolidation occurs in one state and not the other. Solms makes an argument that dreams are generated from the dopaminergic forebrain based largely on pathological lesion studies in humans. We recognize that this argument has some intuitive appeal and agree with some of the tenets but we do not feel that the arguments are completely convincing due to the lack of anatomical controls, including symmetry and laterality. On the whole, there are interesting arguments put forward in these target articles but the evidence does not convince us that new vistas are opened. No Holy Grail of sleep here!

[Hobson et al.; Solms; Vertes & Eastman]

Type
Brief Report
Copyright
© 2000 Cambridge University Press

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