Introduction Sleep is a basic requirement for all people in all cultures. Throughout history, various religions and societies have tried to explain what dreams of unconscious sleep mean. They are windows that really enter the realm of prophetic messages and hidden minds. What we did while our brain was asleep. Whether our emotions in our dreams are the same as those in conscious awakening situations. Whether the brain considers emotions as a true "feel", or is simply a fantasy created by our brains, makes the story of dreams more realistic.
"Emotions" (usually a dream to analyze our recent behavior, a dream of a little girl is a phrase "Yesterday was very emotional." "If I am very emotional, If you want to be respected in business, I have to stop being so emotional "Please think about how emotions fit in a wider mind." We are very Have a fun way of thinking and tell one's feelings to each other I feel like a little girl.
But why is it so emotional? Rosalind Cartwright of Dream Researcher believes that we regenerate old memories and update them with information from recent experiences. This is emotional logic: it is a causal relationship, not an emotional response. Laboratory studies of Cartright show that most dreams are emotionally negative and that the most common are fear, anxiety, anger and confusion. So, when we talk with the bears we talk, do not we usually notice that we are in our dreams? Neuroscientist Allen Braun (and his company) announced a provocative discovery in 2002 using new evidence from brain image scans. When they dream of sleep, they discovered that higher brains are basically offline. Higher brain is the most new part of the brain - cortex - the most gray matter in the human body, and most obvious gray matter not all other mammals.
A dream is understood as a recent autobiographical episode that creates a new memory that can be cited recently by intertwining with the memories of the past, but a nightmare is just a dream that causes a fierce but unpleasant emotional reaction. Dreams remain active for a relatively mild period of time between part of the brain's default network - interconnected regional systems including the thalamus, medial prefrontal cortex and posterior cingulate cortex. REM sleep is an example of a quiet period. This is a sleep stage characterized by rapid eye movements, irregular heart beats, and an increase in breathing rate. REM sleep is not continuous, it is divided into 4 to 5 periods, which together account for about 20% of our sleep. During these REM events, the brain structure of the default network has an impact. Also, while REM sleeping, vivid recall dreams occur most frequently.