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| Behavioral and Brain Sciences |
| Cambridge University Press |
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Volume 23
Issue 6 |
| Dec 01, 2000 |
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ISSN: 0140525x |
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences
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Volume 23 :
Issue 6
Table of Contents
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A new approach for explaining dreaming and REM sleep mechanisms

Amina Khambalia and Colin M. Shapiro
Page 558
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Dreaming and the brain: Toward a cognitive neuroscience of conscious states

J. Allan Hobson, Edward F. Pace-Schott and Robert Stickgold
Page 793
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Dreaming and REM sleep are controlled by different brain mechanisms

Mark Solms
Page 843
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A review of mentation in REM and NREM sleep: Covert REM sleep as a possible reconciliation of two opposing models

Tore A. Nielsen
Page 851
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The case against memory consolidation in REM sleep

Robert P. Vertes and Kathleen E. Eastman
Page 867
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The reinterpretation of dreams: An evolutionary hypothesis of the function of dreaming

Antti Revonsuo
Page 877
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How does the dreaming brain explain the dreaming mind?

John S. Antrobus
Page 904
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Dreaming as an active construction of meaning

Rita B. Ardito
Page 907
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Internally-generated activity, non-episodic memory, and emotional salience in sleep

James A. Bednar
Page 908
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Dreams have meaning but no function

Mark Blagrove
Page 910
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Sleep, not REM sleep, is the royal road to dreams

Alexander A. Borbly and Lutz Wittmann
Page 911
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REM sleep deprivation: The wrong paradigm leading to wrong conclusions

Jan Born and Steffen Gais
Page 912
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REM and NREM mentation: Nielsens model once again supports the supremacy of REM

M. Bosinelli and P.C. Cicogna
Page 913
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How and why the brain makes dreams: A report card on current research on dreaming

Rosalind Cartwright
Page 914
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REM sIeep dreaming: The never-ending story

Corrado Cavallero
Page 916
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Mental states during dreaming and daydreaming: Some methodological loopholes

Peter Chapman and Geoffrey Underwood
Page 917
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Play, dreams, and simulation

J. A. Cheyne
Page 918
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Conceptual coordination bridges information processing and neurophysiology

William J. Clancey
Page 919
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The divorce of REM sleep and dreaming

Anton Coenen
Page 922
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Russell Conduit, Sheila Gillard Crewther and Grahame Coleman
Page 924
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Needed: A new theory

G. William Domhoff
Page 928
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Mesolimbic dopamine and the neuropsychology of dreaming: Some caution and reconsiderations

Fabrizio Doricchi and Cristiano Violani
Page 930
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REM sleep: Desperately seeking isomorphism

Irwin Feinberg
Page 931
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The case against memory consolidation in REM sleep: Balderdash!

William Fishbein
Page 934
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Dreaming is not an adaptation

Owen Flanagan
Page 936
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Sleep, dreaming, and brain activation

Carlo Franzini
Page 939
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The prevalence of typical dream themes challenges the specificity of the threat simulation theory

Anne Germain, Tore A. Nielsen, Antonio Zadra and Jacques Montplaisir
Page 940
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Each distinct type of mental state is supported by specific brain functions

Claude Gottesmann
Page 941
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Where is the forest? Where is the dream?

Ramon Greenberg
Page 943
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State-dependent modulation of cognitive function

R. W. Greene
Page 945
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The dramaturgy of dreams in Pleistocene minds and our own

Keith Gunderson
Page 946
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The waking-to-dreaming continuum and the effects of emotion

Ernest Hartmann
Page 947
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Reflexive and orienting properties of REM sleep dreaming and eye movements

John Herman
Page 950
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The ghost of Sigmund Freud haunts Mark Solmss dream theory

J. Allan Hobson
Page 951
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Dreaming as play

Nicholas Humphrey
Page 953
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The interpretation of physiology

Barbara E. Jones
Page 955
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The problem of dreaming in NREM sleep continues to challenge reductionist (two generator) models of dream generation

Tracey L. Kahan
Page 956
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Dreaming has content and meaning not just form

Milton Kramer
Page 959
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Papez dreams: Mechanism and phenomenology of dreaming

E. E. Krieckhaus
Page 961
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Lucid dreaming: Evidence and methodology

Stephen LaBerge
Page 962
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All brain work including recall is state-dependent

Dietrich Lehmann and Martha Koukkou
Page 964
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Nightmares: Friend or foe?

Ross Levin
Page 965
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Kochs postulates confirm cholinergic modulation of REM sleep

Ralph Lydic and Helen A. Baghdoyan
Page 966
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Dream production is not chaotic

Mauro Mancia
Page 967
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Novel concepts of sleep-wakefullness and neuronal information coding

Thaddeus J. Marczynski
Page 968
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The illusory function of dreams: Another example of cognitive bias

Linda Mealey
Page 971
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A more general evolutionary hypothesis about dream function

Jacques Montangero
Page 972
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Sorting out additions to the understanding of cognition during sleep

William H. Moorcroft
Page 973
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Dreams and sleep: Are new schemas revealing?

Peter J. Morgane and David J. Mokler
Page 976
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Critical brain characteristics to consider in developing dream and memory theories

Adrian R. Morrison and Larry D. Sanford
Page 977
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Post-traumatic nightmares as a dysfunctional state

Tore A. Nielsen and Anne Germain
Page 978
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Insights from functional neuroimaging studies of behavioral state regulation in healthy and depressed subjects

Eric A. Nofzinger
Page 979
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Toward a new neuropsychological isomorphism

M. Occhionero and M. J. Esposito
Page 980
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Expanding Nielsens covert REM model, questioning Solmss approach to dreaming and REM sleep, and reinterpreting the Vertes Eastman view of REM sleep and memory

Robert D. Ogilvie, Tomoka Takeuchi and Timothy I. Murphy
Page 981
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Nielsens concept of covert REM sleep is a path toward a more realistic view of sleep psychophysiology

Edward F. Pace-Schott
Page 983
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Dreaming is not a non-conscious electrophysiologic state

J. F. Pagel
Page 984
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The dream of reason creates monsters . . . especially when we neglect the role of emotions in REM-states

Jaak Panksepp
Page 988
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Neurotransmitter mechanisms of dreaming: Implication of modulatory systems based on dream intensity

E. K. Perry and M. A. Piggott
Page 990
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Metaphoric threat is more real than real threat

Jordan B. Peterson and Colin G. DeYoung
Page 992
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One machinery, multiple cognitive states: The value of the AIM model

C. M. Portas
Page 993
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Neural constraints on cognition in sleep

Helene Sophrin Porte
Page 994
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The contents of consciousness during sleep: Some theoretical problems

Antti Revonsuo
Page 995
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Search activity: A key to resolving contradictions in sleep/dream investigation

V. S. Rotenberg
Page 996
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Some myths are slow to die

Rafael Salin-Pascual, Dmitry Gerashchenko and Priyattam J. Shiromani
Page 999
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Time course of dreaming and sleep organization

Piero Salzarulo
Page 1000
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Dream research: Integration of physiological and psychological models

Michael Schredl
Page 1001
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Continued vitality of the Freudian theory of dreaming

Howard Shevrin and Alan S. Eiser
Page 1004
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Evaluating the relationship between REM and memory consolidation: A need for scholarship and hypothesis testing

Carlyle Smith and Gregory M. Rose
Page 1007
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The mechanism of the REM state is more than a sum of its parts

Mark Solms
Page 1008
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Neuronal basis of dreaming and mentation during slow-wave (non-REM) sleep

M. Steriade
Page 1009
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Inclusive versus exclusive approaches to sleep and dream research

Robert Stickgold
Page 1011
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Evolutionary psychology can ill afford adaptionist and mentalist credulity

Nicholas S. Thompson
Page 1013
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The pharmacology of threatening dreams

Lawrence J. Wichlinski
Page 1016
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Threat perceptions and avoidance in recurrent dreams

A. Zadra and D. C. Donderi
Page 1017
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Dream science 2000: A response to commentaries on Dreaming and the brain

J. Allan Hobson, Edward F. Pace-Schott and Robert Stickgold
Page 1019
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Forebrain mechanisms of dreaming are activated from a variety of sources

Mark Solms
Page 1035
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Covert REM sleep effects on REM mentation: Further methodological considerations and supporting evidence

Tore A. Nielsen
Page 1040
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REM sleep is not committed to memory

Robert P. Vertes and Kathleen E. Eastman
Page 1057
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Did ancestral humans dream for their lives?

Antti Revonsuo
Page 1063
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