The Stuff of Dreams

话说梦的本质

新概念英语第四册 流利英语 美音

语言学习

3 分钟

第 19 集

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  • Lesson 19

  • The stuff of dreams

  • What is going on when a person experiences rapid eye-movements during sleep?

  • It is fairly clear that the sleeping period must have some function, and because there is so much of it the function would seem to be important.

  • Speculations about its nature have been going on for literally thousands of years,

  • and one odd finding that makes the problem puzzling is that it looks very much as if sleeping is not simply a matter of giving the body a rest.

  • 'Rest', in terms of muscle relaxation and so on, can be achieved by a brief period lying, or even sitting down.

  • The body's tissues are self-repairing and self-restoring to a degree, and function best when more or less continuously active.

  • In fact a basic amount of movement occurs during sleep which is specifically concerned with preventing muscle inactivity.

  • If it is not a question of resting the body, then perhaps it is the brain that needs resting?

  • This might be a plausible hypothesis were it not for two factors.

  • First the electroencephalograph (which is simply a device for recording the electrical activity of the brain by attaching electrodes to the scalp)

  • shows that while there is a change in the pattern of activity during sleep, there is no evidence that the total amount of activity is any less.

  • The second factor is more interesting and more fundamental.

  • Some years ago an American psychiatrist named William Dement published experiments dealing with the recording of eye-movements during sleep.

  • He showed that the average individual's sleep cycle is punctuated with peculiar bursts of eye-movements, some drifting and slow, others jerky and rapid.

  • People woken during these periods of eye-movements generally reported that they had been dreaming.

  • When woken at other times they reported no dreams.

  • If one group of people were disturbed from their eye-movement sleep for several nights on end,

  • and another group were disturbed for an equal period of time but when they were not exhibiting eye-movements,