Posts Tagged ‘dreaming mind’

Human Mind: Sound And Vision Wired Through Same ‘Black Box’

Monday, November 30th, 2009

ScienceDaily (Aug. 13, 2009) — Sounds and images share a similar neural code in the human brain, according to a new Canadian study. In the online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), scientists from the Université de Montréal and the Montreal Neurological Institute at McGill University explain how the same neural code in the brain allows people to distinguish between different types of sounds, such as speech and music, or different images.

Participants were recruited to undergo functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI), a non-invasive form of brain mapping used to determine how the brain recognizes different characteristics in musical instruments, words from conversations or environmental sounds. Subjects underwent an exhaustive three hours of FMRI exams to provide precise information about how the brain reacts when different sounds are played.

"It turns out that the brain uses the same strategy to encode sounds than it uses to encode different images," explains lead author Marc Schönwiesner, a Université de Montréal psychology professor. "This may make it easier for people to combine sounds and images that belong to the same object, such as the dribbling of a basketball."

The next step for the researchers is to determine exactly how the brain distinguishes between rock drum beats to the strings of a symphony or from a French conversation to an English one. "Our goal is to disentangle exactly how the brain extracts these different types of sounds. This is a step may eventually let us reconstruct a song that a person has heard from according to the activity pattern in their brain," explains Dr. Schönwiesner, who is also a member of the International Laboratory for Brain, Music and Sound Research (BRAMS), a joint Université de Montréal and McGill University think-tank on music and the mind.

As scientists advance in decoding brain activation patterns, says Dr. Schönwiesner, mind-boggling applications can be envisaged. "If researchers can reconstruct a song a person has heard according to an fMRI reading, we’re not far off to being able to record brain patterns during sleep and reconstruct dreams," he predicts. "That would be really cool, although this possibility is decades of research away."

This study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the German Academy of Sciences.

Journal reference:

1. Marc Schönwiesner, Robert Zatorre. Spectro-temporal modulation transfer function of single voxels in the human auditory cortex measured with high-resolution fMRI. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0907682106

Adapted from materials provided by University of Montreal.

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University of Montreal (2009, August 13). Human Mind: Sound And Vision Wired Through Same ‘Black Box’. ScienceDaily. Retrieved October 31, 2009, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2009/08/090812111445.htm

 

Book Review: Universal Dream Key

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Universal Dream KeyThe Universal Dream Key
Patricia Garfield
Harper Collins/Cliff Street Books, 2001
ISBN: 0060953640

Every night, all over the world, sleepers are dreaming the same 12 dreams. The details differ but the same themes recur in every culture, as they have throughout recorded history. This much anticipated book presents a detailed analysis of the many possible meanings of these fundamental dreams, creating a skeleton key to the 12 doors of the dreaming mind.Patricia Garfield, Ph.D. is a worldwide authority on dreams. She is one of the six co-founders of The Association for the Study of Dreams and is the 1998-99 President. Her bestseller Creative Dreaming is considered a classic, available in twelve languages. For more information, visit the website.

Learn more about Dream History

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Dreams have been with us since the beginning of time, and have been viewed differently from century to century, and culture to cultures. Check out these resources to help you take a dream journey through time:

The History of Dreams with Richard Wilkerson This delightful six week course gives you both e-mail essays on the history of dreams and dreaming, as well as interactive labs and online dream groups to teach you ways of exploring and understanding your dreams. Course includes dream groups on line plus:

1. Introduction and Basic Recall Skills: The Peer-Relations Approach
2. Ancient Dreams: Messages from the Gods
3. Sigmund Freud: The Dreamwork of the Unconscious
4. Carl Gustav Jung: Mythic Dreams and Wholeness
5. Other Pre- 1960’s Dream Theories
6. Frederick (Fritz) Perls : Gestalt Dream Techniques.
7. Mindell and Gendlin: The DreamBody
8. From Couch to Culture: Grassroots & Modern Dreamwork Movements
9. Non-Interpretive Dreamwork: Lucid, Mutual, Paranormal & Pro-active Dreaming.
10. Dream Science and Dreamwork: Friends or Foes?
11. Dream Anthropology: How Culture Influences Dreamwork
12. Dreaming In Cyberspace: New Trends in Dream Sharing on the Internet.

Our Dreaming Mind, the definitive book on dream techniques, theories, and perspectives historically. By Robert Van De Castle.