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The patient reported no dreams even when woken in the midst of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which is normally associated with dreaming. But to the researchers' surprise, her sleep pattern was perfectly normal. [/b]
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She used to experience 3 to 4 dreams per week, says Claudio Bassetti, now of University Hospital Zurich in Switzerland, who studied the woman. After the stroke, she had no dreams for a whole year, yet her sleep and mental functions appeared otherwise unaffected.[/b]
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This shows that REM sleep and dreaming do not always go hand in hand, says Bassetti. The occipital lobe, which was damaged by the woman's stroke, is likely to play an important role in dreaming[/b]
http://www.bioedonline.org/news/news.cfm?art=1141
read this article it basically tells you that rem has nothing to do with dreams.
Quote:
So REM may simply bring the brain back from deep sleep periodically to help us wake up if we need to, says Horne.
But the function may be different in newborns, who typically spend around 8 hours per day in REM sleep. Here, the sleep pattern may be related to brain development. [/b]
you proberly dream all night but cant remeber it and the end stages of sleep where you can easily wake up to remeber it.
see the woman went through rem stages but still did not dream. so theirfore rem does not equal dream or the woman would have dreamt once during a year. dreaming is proberly caused by your occipital lobe not REM or the woman would have dreamt atleast once during the year.