INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NOVEL RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT International Peer Reviewed & Refereed Journals, Open Access Journal ISSN Approved Journal No: 2456-4184 | Impact factor: 8.76 | ESTD Year: 2016
Scholarly open access journals, Peer-reviewed, and Refereed Journals, Impact factor 8.76 (Calculate by google scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool) , Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Indexing in all major database & Metadata, Citation Generator, Digital Object Identifier(DOI)
ABSTRACT
In our dreams, we travel to a separate reality—a hallucinatory realm that feels just as real as anything we experience during the day. Though characteristic of human sleep, these frequently odd episodes are still not fully understood. For neuroscientific investigations of dreaming, retrospective dream reports' susceptibility to distortion and amnesia poses a basic issue. In a typical dream, the dreamer accepts the events and feelings exactly way they are, regardless of how irrational they may seem. On the other hand, a lucid dream is one in which the dreamer is conscious that they are dreaming. Some lucid dreamers claim that this abrupt awareness gives them the power to change the path of the dream going forward. Such statements have hitherto been hard to support. As we all know, dreams that were vivid, thrilling, or horrifying while they were happening often become hazy and formless upon awakening, and this is especially true of dreamers' accounts of their most recent experiences. According to the self-organization hypothesis of dreaming, the sleeping brain is a self-organizing system that can weave together disparate and incongruous neural impulses (i.e., various aspects of dreams) into a mostly continuous story while the individual is asleep. According to this idea, dreams are a byproduct of the sleeping brain rather than an autonomous activity, reflecting the physiological and psychological processes of the dreamer, such as memory enlargement, emotion control, and sensory perception.
Here in this article the author explain the concept of sleep as well as dreams and characteristic of dream with a doctrinal study on the age of adolescent student who suffers this type of sleeping problems and comes with some suggestions.
"THE SLEEPER AS DREAMER ; A CASESTUDY ON ADOLESCENTS", International Journal of Novel Research and Development (www.ijnrd.org), ISSN:2456-4184, Vol.7, Issue 12, page no.c498-c500, December-2022, Available :http://www.ijnrd.org/papers/IJNRD2212260.pdf
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ISSN:
2456-4184 | IMPACT FACTOR: 8.76 Calculated By Google Scholar| ESTD YEAR: 2016
An International Scholarly Open Access Journal, Peer-Reviewed, Refereed Journal Impact Factor 8.76 Calculate by Google Scholar and Semantic Scholar | AI-Powered Research Tool, Multidisciplinary, Monthly, Multilanguage Journal Indexing in All Major Database & Metadata, Citation Generator
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