How Did Scientists Without Modern Technology Study the Dreaming Mind?
Alfred Maury lies asleep in bed. His assistant brushes a feather over Maury’s lips, sweeping the feather upward, tickling the sleeping man’s nose. Then the assistant shakes Maury awake and asks, “What were you dreaming?”
Maury replies in a drowsy voice. “A man was tearing a mask off of my face. It was torture!”
Torture? No, it was science. Welcome to the old-fashioned dream laboratory.
Alfred Maury’s conversation is a fictional reconstruction, but the French scholar really performed the feather experiment in the nineteenth century. Today, scientists have sophisticated technology to help them study the dreaming brain. Electroencephalography (EEG) machines can record the electrical activity of the brain during sleep. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) captures images of blood flow in the brain. These tools allow scientists to see what’s going on in the brain when we dream. But before these inventions, sleep and dream researchers had to get creative. They took to their beds and experimented on their own dreaming minds.
Two French scholars of the mid nineteenth century revolutionized dream study—not with their conclusions but with their methods. Their names were Alfred Maury and Léon d’Hervey de Saint-Denys. Grab a feather and let’s visit their labs.
The Guillotine Dream
Bu hikaye Muse Science Magazine for Kids dergisinin November/December 2016 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Muse Science Magazine for Kids dergisinin November/December 2016 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
A Mars Rock Found With Leopard Spots Could Be a Sign of Ancient Life
IN JULY, NASA'S PERSEVERANCE ROVER CAME ACROSS A SPOTTED ROCK IN WHAT WAS ONCE A RIVERBED IN THE JEZERO CRATER ON MARS.
Para Athlete Uses Exoskeleton Suit to Carry the Olympic Torch
In July, a 36-year-old French tennis para athlete, Kevin Piette, got a chance to participate in this summer’s Olympic torch relay without using a wheelchair.
Ancient Egyptians May Have Used a Water System to Lift Stones to Build Pyramid
HOW ANCIENT EGYPTIANS BUILT THE MASSIVE PYRAMIDS IN EGYPT MORE THAN 4,000 YEARS AGO HAS LONG BEEN A TOPIC OF WONDER AND DEBATE.
Seals Can Make Big Dives Thanks to Their Big Hearts
SEALS AND SEA LIONS, WHICH ARE SEMI-AQUATIC MAMMALS, CAN HOLD THEIR BREATHS UNDERWATER FOR ESPECIALLY LONG PERIODS OF TIME.
THE BIG-CITY LIFE OF STEVEN J.BIKE SHOP RABBIT IN BROOKLYN, NEW YORK
Bicycle Roots is a full-service bike shop. It's in the heart of Brooklyn, New York. Joe Lawler is the co-owner and service manager. Perhaps more important, he's \"dad\" to the shop's most popular employee. That's Steven J. Lawler.
Wild Ones
WHAT FACTORS DRIVE PEOPLE TO BUY MONKEYS, TIGERS, AND OTHER WILD ANIMALS?
HOW TO CONQUER THE WORLD
A brief history
What would happen if meteors hit Earth?
You may have seen Ameteors fly into Earth's atmosphere, in the form of shooting stars.
WORKING WORMS
DON'T JUST THROW THOSE TABLE SCRAPS AWAY! LET A BOX OF WORMS TURN THEM INTO SOMETHING USEFUL.
Dog Rescue Saves Lives
THE ARGUMENT FOR ADOPTING A NO-KILL GOAL