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DREAMS ARE BIZARRE, SO WHY DO THEY SEEM NORMAL WHEN WE'RE ASLEEP?

BBC Science Focus

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April 2023

Our sleeping brains weave a patchwork out of our memories in complex, baffling ways

DREAMS ARE BIZARRE, SO WHY DO THEY SEEM NORMAL WHEN WE'RE ASLEEP?

Dreams are weird. Utterly impossible events happen in them, then immediately flow into completely different ones, with no obvious rhyme or reason. Contexts, behaviours, individuals... they all shift around randomly during our dreams, with no care for coherent narrative or the laws of physics. It’s all very strange. Except it doesn’t feel strange while it’s happening. We can be dreaming about floating upside down in a cavern of milk, sat alongside someone who is both our mother and co-worker, and our dreaming self will still think, Yep, this is all to be expected. Typical Tuesday occurrence.” Why is this? Why would our sleeping brain be so blasé about unusual, reality-bending experiences? A big part of this is down to the reason we dream in the first place. A growing body of research suggests that dreaming is a vital part of memory consolidation. Our brains don’t just create all of the memories we accumulate while we’re awake and leave them sat there purposelessly, like most of the photos on the typical smartphone. No, our newly acquired memories need to be effectively integrated into the brain’s stores and networks of existing memories that are the basis of our identity, our very minds, and more. This is what memory consolidation is, and a lot of it takes place during our dreams.

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ART FOR HEART'S SAKE

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2 mins

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Most of us have the odd bad dream. But if you're regularly waking in a cold sweat, you might be wondering: is it just stress, or something more serious?

time to read

1 min

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When European scientists first set eyes on the platypus, in the form of a pelt and a sketch shipped over from Australia in 1798, they couldn't believe it.

time to read

2 mins

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Everyone has trouble sleeping from time to time, even the scientists who spend every waking hour studying it. So, what steps do the experts take when they can't drop off?

time to read

7 mins

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Not usually.

time to read

1 min

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WAS THE SEA ALWAYS BLUE?

Our planet has had an ocean for around 3.8 billion years, but new research suggests it hasn't always been blue.

time to read

1 mins

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It's not true that the seas are salty because of whale pee, although a single fin whale can produce as much as 250 gallons of urine a day.

time to read

1 mins

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BBC Science Focus

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Do pheromones control human attraction?

Could invisible chemical signals sway our behaviour, or who we're attracted to - all without us knowing?

time to read

4 mins

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time to read

3 mins

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time to read

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