Fechner Julia, Born Maren, Mancini Massimiliano, Akata Zeynep, Haag Philipp, Diekelmann Susanne, Born Jan
Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Department of Information Engineering and Computer Science, Multimedia and Human Understanding Group, University of Trento, Trento, Italy.
Sleep Adv. 2024 Nov 28;5(1):zpae088. doi: 10.1093/sleepadvances/zpae088. eCollection 2024.
The "Zeigarnik effect" refers to the phenomenon where future intentions are remembered effectively only as long as they are not executed. This study investigates whether these intentions, which remain active during sleep, influence dream content.
After an adaptation night, each of the 19 participants (10 women and 9 men) received three different task plans in the evening before the experimental night, each describing how to perform specific tasks. One of the task plans (completed) was then to be executed before the sleep period, another task (uncompleted) was told to be executed in the next morning, and on the third task (interrupted) participants were interrupted during the enactment before sleep and told to resume it the next morning. Polysomnography and multiple awakenings were conducted, resulting in 86 dream reports, 36 in NREM stage 2, and 50 in rapid eye movement sleep. After a traditional rating-based analysis of dream reports yielded inconsistent results, we analyzed the reports using a transformer-based assessment of dream incorporation, which quantified the semantic similarity between the dreams and pre-sleep tasks.
The number of dreams showing above-criterion similarity to the respective task was significantly lower for the completed than the uncompleted or interrupted tasks ( < .05, χ test). This pattern was confirmed through a forced choice approach, where-based on the similarity of single sentences of the dream reports-each dream report was allocated to one of the three task plans ( < 0.01, one-tailed χ test).
Active intentions increase the likelihood of dream content being semantically similar to these intentions.
“蔡加尼克效应”指的是只有在未来意图未被执行时才能被有效记住的现象。本研究调查了这些在睡眠期间仍保持活跃的意图是否会影响梦境内容。
在适应夜之后,19名参与者(10名女性和9名男性)在实验夜前的晚上分别收到三个不同的任务计划,每个计划描述了如何执行特定任务。然后,其中一个任务计划(已完成)在睡眠时间前执行,另一个任务(未完成)被告知在第二天早上执行,而对于第三个任务(中断),参与者在睡眠前执行过程中被打断,并被告知第二天早上继续。进行了多导睡眠图监测和多次唤醒,共得到86份梦境报告,其中36份来自非快速眼动睡眠2期,50份来自快速眼动睡眠。在对梦境报告进行基于传统评分的分析得出不一致的结果后,我们使用基于变换器的梦境融入评估方法对报告进行分析,该方法量化了梦境与睡眠前任务之间的语义相似性。
与各自任务表现出高于标准相似性的梦境数量,已完成任务组显著低于未完成或中断任务组(χ检验,<0.05)。通过强制选择方法证实了这一模式,即根据梦境报告单句的相似性,将每份梦境报告分配到三个任务计划之一(单尾χ检验,<0.01)。
活跃的意图增加了梦境内容在语义上与这些意图相似的可能性。