Article
Rapid eye movement sleep dreaming is characterized by uncoupled EEG activity between frontal and perceptual cortical regions
Fecha
2003Autor
Corsi-Cabrera, M.
Miro, E.
Del-Rio-Portilla, Y.
Perez-Garci, E.
Villanueva, Y.
Guevara, M.A.
Institución
Resumen
EEG coherent activity is involved in the binding of spatially separated but temporally correlated stimuli into whole events. Cognitive features of rapid eye movement sleep (REM) dreaming resemble frontal lobe dysfunction. Therefore, temporal coupling of EEG activity between frontal and perceptual regions was analyzed from 10min prior to dream reports (8 adults) from stage-2 and REM sleep. EEG correlation between frontal and perceptual regions decreased and, among perceptual regions increased during REM. The temporal dissociation of EEG activity between executive and perceptual regions supplies an inadequate mechanism for the binding and interpretation of ongoing perceptual activity resulting in dream bizarreness. � 2003 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights reserved.