eLife (Jun 2020)

Dreaming with hippocampal damage

  • Goffredina Spanò,
  • Gloria Pizzamiglio,
  • Cornelia McCormick,
  • Ian A Clark,
  • Sara De Felice,
  • Thomas D Miller,
  • Jamie O Edgin,
  • Clive R Rosenthal,
  • Eleanor A Maguire

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.56211
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

The hippocampus is linked with both sleep and memory, but there is debate about whether a salient aspect of sleep – dreaming – requires its input. To address this question, we investigated if human patients with focal bilateral hippocampal damage and amnesia engaged in dreaming. We employed a provoked awakening protocol where participants were woken up at various points throughout the night, including during non-rapid eye movement and rapid eye movement sleep, to report their thoughts in that moment. Despite being roused a similar number of times, dream frequency was reduced in the patients compared to control participants, and the few dreams they reported were less episodic-like in nature and lacked content. These results suggest that hippocampal integrity may be necessary for typical dreaming to occur, and aligns dreaming with other hippocampal-dependent processes such as episodic memory that are central to supporting our mental life.

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