
G. William Domhoff presents a new neurocognitive theory of dreams in his book The Emergence of Dreaming. His theory stresses the similarities between dreaming and drifting waking thought, based on laboratory and non-laboratory studies that show as many as 70 to 80 percent of dreams are dramatized enactments of significant waking personal concerns about the past, present, and future. Domhoff discusses a developmental dimension of dreaming based on the unexpected laboratory discovery that young children dream infrequently and with less complexity until ages 9-11-supported by new findings with children who are awake that demonstrate the gradual emergence of cognitive skills necessary for dreaming. Domhoff's theory locates the neural substrate for dreaming in the same brain network now known to be most active during mind-wandering, and explains the transition into dreaming. Various strands of evidence lead to the conclusion that dreaming does not have any adaptive function, and is best viewed as an accidental by-product of adaptive waking cognitive abilities. However, cross-cultural and historical studies reveal that human inventiveness has made dreams an essential part of healing and religious ceremonies in many societies. Three chapters present detailed critiques of other current theories of dreams. The final chapter suggests how new and better studies of dreaming and its neurocognitive basis can be carried out using recent technological developments in both communications (e.g., smartphone apps) and neuroimaging (e.g., near infrared spectroscopy). As one of the first empirical and scientific treatments on dream research, The Emergence of Dreaming will be of interest to psychologists, cognitive neuroscientists, sleep researchers, and psychiatrists.
This book investigates the neurocognitive origins of dreaming by proposing that dreams are an accidental by-product of the same brain networks responsible for mind-wandering and waking thought. G. William Domhoff, a prominent researcher in the field, utilizes decades of laboratory and non-laboratory data to construct his theory. He argues that dreaming is not an adaptive function but rather a manifestation of personal concerns enacted through embodied simulation. The work integrates developmental psychology, neuroimaging, and cross-cultural studies to provide a comprehensive framework for understanding the mechanics of the dreaming mind.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a foundational empirical treatment of dream research that challenges traditional adaptive theories. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is tailored specifically for professionals in psychology, neuroscience, and psychiatry.
Page Count:
360
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190674970
ISBN-13:
9780190674977
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