Wong William, Herzog Rubén, Andrade Kátia Cristine, Andrillon Thomas, de Araujo Draulio Barros, Arnulf Isabelle, Ataei Somayeh, Avvenuti Giulia, Baird Benjamin, Bellesi Michele, Bergamo Damiana, Bernardi Giulio, Blagrove Mark, Decat Nicolas, Demirel Çağatay, Dresler Martin, Eichenlaub Jean-Baptiste, Elce Valentina, Gais Steffen, De Gennaro Luigi, Gott Jarrod, Hiramatsu Chihiro, Juel Bjørn Erik, Konkoly Karen R, Kumral Deniz, Lacaux Célia, LaRocque Joshua J, Lenggenhager Bigna, Mallett Remington, Mota-Rolim Sérgio Arthuro, Motomura Yuki, Nilsen Andre Sevenius, Noreika Valdas, Oudiette Delphine, Palhano-Fontes Fernanda, Palmieri Jessica, Paller Ken A, Perogamvros Lampros, Revonsuo Antti, van Rijn Elaine, Scarpelli Serena, Schönauer Monika, Schoch Sarah F, Siclari Francesca, Sikka Pilleriin, Storm Johan Frederik, Takeichi Hiroshige, Valli Katja, Wamsley Erin J, Windt Jennifer M, Zhang Jing, Zhao Jialin, Tsuchiya Naotsugu
School of Psychological Sciences and Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, Monash University, Clayton, Australia.
Institut du Cerveau - Paris Brain Institute - ICM, Inserm, CNRS, APHP, Hôpital de la Pitié Salpêtrière, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France.
Nat Commun. 2025 Aug 13;16(1):7495. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-61945-1.
Magneto/electroencephalography (M/EEG) studies of dreaming are an essential paradigm in the investigation of neurocognitive processes of human consciousness during sleep, but they are limited by the number of observations that can be collected per study. Dream research also involves substantial methodological and conceptual variability, which poses problems for the integration of results. To address these issues, here we present the DREAM database-an expanding collection of standardized datasets on human sleep M/EEG combined with dream report data-with an initial release comprising 20 datasets, 505 participants, and 2643 awakenings. Each awakening consists, at minimum, of sleep M/EEG ( ≥ 20 s, ≥100 Hz, ≥2 electrodes) up to the time of waking and a standardized dream report classification of the subject's experience during sleep. We observed that reports of conscious experiences can be predicted with objective features extracted from EEG recordings in both Rapid Eye Movement (REM) and non-REM (NREM) sleep. We also provide several examples of analyses, showcasing the database's high potential in paving the way for new research questions at a scale beyond the capacity of any single research group.
对梦境的磁/脑电图(M/EEG)研究是睡眠期间人类意识神经认知过程研究中的一个重要范式,但每次研究可收集的观察数据数量有限。梦境研究还涉及大量方法和概念上的变异性,这给结果整合带来了问题。为解决这些问题,我们在此展示梦境数据库——一个不断扩充的关于人类睡眠M/EEG与梦境报告数据的标准化数据集集合,首次发布包含20个数据集、505名参与者和2643次觉醒。每次觉醒至少包括直至醒来时的睡眠M/EEG(≥20秒,≥100赫兹,≥2个电极)以及对受试者睡眠期间经历的标准化梦境报告分类。我们观察到,在快速眼动(REM)睡眠和非快速眼动(NREM)睡眠中,都可以用从脑电图记录中提取的客观特征来预测有意识体验的报告。我们还提供了几个分析示例,展示了该数据库在为超出任何单个研究小组能力范围的新研究问题铺平道路方面的巨大潜力。