Abstract

The role of dreaming in childhood and in adulthood are still equally enigmatic fields yet to be fully explored. However, while there is a consensus at least about the typical content and formal characteristics of adult dream reports, these features are still a matter of debate in the case of young children. Longitudinal developmental laboratory studies concluded that preschoolers' dreams usually depict static images about mostly animals and body states of the dreamer but they basically lack the active representation of the self, human characters, social interactions, dream emotions and motion imagery. Due to methodological arguments these results became the reference points in the literature of developmental dream research, in spite of the significantly different results of numerous recent and relevant studies using extra-laboratory settings. This study aims to establish a methodologically well-controlled and valid way to collect children's dreams for a representative period of time in a familiar home setting to serve as a comparison to the laboratory method. Pre trained parents acted as interviewers in the course of a 6 week-period of dream collection upon morning awakenings. Our results suggest that even preschoolers are likely to represent their own self in an active role (70%) in their mostly kinematic (82%) dream narratives. Their dream reports contain more human, than animal characters (70 and 7% of all dream characters respectively), and social interactions, self-initiated actions, and emotions are usual part of these dreams. These results are rather similar to those of recent extra-laboratory studies, suggesting that methodological issues may strongly interfere with research outcomes especially in the case of preschoolers' dream narratives. We suggest that nighttime awakenings in the laboratory setting could be crucial in understanding the contradictory results of dream studies in case of young children.

Highlights

  • Cortical activation during sleep and/or REM sleep-like processes are associated with vivid oneiric experiences in adults and in verbal-aged children

  • An important and often neglected aspect of dream research is the indirect nature of the data; we only have access to the verbal narrative and not the dream experience itself

  • We should always keep in mind that the verbal and narrative abilities and memory capacity of the children may shape, affect or even limit the dream reports

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Summary

Introduction

Cortical activation during sleep and/or REM sleep-like processes are associated with vivid oneiric experiences in adults and in verbal-aged children. Foulkes carried out a longitudinal study (Foulkes, 1982, 1999) (children from 3 to years) and several cross sectional ones with various age groups (Foulkes, 1967, 1979; Foulkes et al, 1967, 1969, 1990). The majority of these studies used a laboratory based stetting of dream collection with EEG monitoring and systematic nocturnal awakenings requiring immediate dream reports to the laboratory assistant personally or via intercom

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