MIT Dream Research Interacts Directly With an Individual’s Dreaming Brain and Manipulates the Content

Dream Experimentation

“Dormio takes dream research to a new level, interacting directly with an individual’s dreaming brain and manipulating the actual content of their dreams,” says Robert Stickgold, director of the Center for Sleep and Cognition at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. Credit: Helen Gao

Device not only helps record dream reports, but also guides dreams toward particular themes.

The study of dreams has entered the modern era in exciting ways, and researchers from MIT and other institutions have created a community dedicated to advancing the field, lending it legitimacy, and expanding further research opportunities.

In a new paper, researchers from the Media Lab’s Fluid Interfaces group introduce a novel method called “Targeted Dream Incubation” (TDI). This protocol, implemented through an app in conjunction with a wearable sleep-tracking sensor device, not only helps record dream reports, but also guides dreams toward particular themes by repeating targeted information at sleep onset, thereby enabling the incorporation of this information into dream content. The TDI method and accompanying technology serve as tools for controlled experimentation in dream study, widening avenues for research into how dreams impact emotion, creativity, memory, and beyond.

The paper, “Dormio: A Targeted Dream Incubation Device,” is co-authored by lead researcher Adam Haar Horowitz and professor of media arts and sciences Pattie Maes, who is also head of the Fluid Interfaces group. Additional authors on the paper are Tony J. Cunningham, postdoc at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Harvard Medical School, and Robert Stickgold, director of the Center for Sleep and Cognition at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School.

Previous neuroscience studies from researchers such as sleep and cognitive sciences expert Stickgold show that hypnagogia (the earliest sleep stage) is similar to the REM stage in terms of brainwaves and experience; however, unlike REM, individuals can still hear audio during hypnagogia while they dream.

“This state of mind is trippy, loose, flexible, and divergent,” explains Haar Horowitz. “It’s like turning the notch up high on mind-wandering and making it immersive — being pushed and pulled with new sensations like your body floating and falling, with your thoughts quickly snapping in and out of control.”

To facilitate the TDI protocol, an interdisciplinary team at the Media Lab designed and developed Dormio, a sleep-tracking device that can alter dreams by tracking hypnagogia and then delivering audio cues based on incoming physiological data, at precise times in the sleep cycle, to make dream direction possible. Upon awakening, a person’s guided dream content can be used to complete tasks such as creative story writing, and compared experimentally to waking thought content.

“Dormio takes dream research to a new level, interacting directly with an individual’s dreaming brain and manipulating the actual content of their dreams,” says Stickgold. “The potential value of Dormio for enhancing learning and creativity are literally mind-blowing.”

The Media Lab team’s first pilot study using Dormio demonstrated dream incubation and creativity augmentation in six people, and was presented alt.CHI in 2018. Multiple scientists began reaching out to the team expressing interest in replicating the dream-control research. These requests led to the first Dream Engineering workshop, which was held at the Media Lab in January 2019, organized by Maes, Haar Horowitz, and Judith Amores from the Fluid Interfaces group, and Michelle Carr, visiting researcher from the University of Rochester Sleep and Neurophysiology Laboratory. The workshop brought together many of the world’s leading dream researchers, including pioneers such as Deirdre Barrett, Bjorn Rasch, Ken Paller, and Stephen LaBerge, to brainstorm new technologies for studying, recording, and influencing dreams.

The talks and technologies presented at the workshop further led to a Special Issue on Dream Engineering for the journal Consciousness and Cognition, with Maes, Haar Horowitz, Amores, and Carr serving as guest editors.

“Most sleep and dream studies have so far been limited to university sleep labs and have been very expensive, as well as cumbersome, for both researchers and participants,” says Maes. “Our research group is excited to be pioneering new, compact, and cheap technologies for studying sleep and interfacing with dreams, thereby opening up opportunities for more studies to happen and for these experiments to take place in natural settings. Apart from benefiting scientists, this work has the potential to lead to new commercial technologies that go beyond sleep tracking to issue interventions that affect sleep onset, sleep quality, sleep-based memory consolidation, and learning.”

The research itself is central to Haar Horowitz’s thesis work in the Program of Media Arts and Sciences. This past year, he ran a larger dream study with 50 subjects, which replicated and extended the results of the previous study.

“We showed that dream incubation is tied to performance benefits on three tests of creativity, by both objective and subjective metrics,” Haar Horowitz states. “Dreaming about a specific theme seems to offer benefits post-sleep, such as on creativity tasks related to this theme. This is unsurprising in light of historical figures like Mary Shelley or Salvador Dalí, who were inspired creatively by their dreams. The difference here is that we induce these creatively beneficial dreams on purpose, in a targeted manner.”

An enhanced Dormio device has now also been built, as well as an analysis platform, a streaming platform, an iOS app for audio capture and streaming, and a web app for audio capture, storage, and streaming. These mobile and online platforms allow the TDI method to be shared through a variety of open-source technologies.

A number of other universities have likewise begun related Dormio studies; these include Duke University, Boston College, Harvard University, the University of Rochester, and the University of Chicago.

The Media Lab research team is also leading collaborations with artists, using dreams to create new artwork and augment artistic creativity. This work, which mixes sleep science and media art, has been shown at the Beijing Biennale and Ars Electronica festival, and a new collaboration with installation artist Carsten Holler looks to create an overnight experimental art piece.

Reference: “Dormio: A targeted dream incubation device” by Adam Haar Horowitz, Tony J. Cunninghamb, Pattie Maes and Robert Stickgold, 30 May 2020, Consciousness and Cognition.
DOI: 10.1016/j.concog.2020.102938

The Dormio development team includes researchers Haar Horowitz, Tomás Vega, Ishaan Grover, Pedro Reynolds-Cuéllar, Oscar Rosello, Abhinandan Jain, and Eyal Perry, along with students in the MIT Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program Matthew Ha, Christina Chen, and Kathleen Esfahany.

6 Comments on "MIT Dream Research Interacts Directly With an Individual’s Dreaming Brain and Manipulates the Content"

  1. I love the work on dream research being done here.
    I might have something for you , I painted a 7 foot by 5 foot painting of a lucid dream I had while I was attending NSCAD(Nova Scotia College of Art & Design) & think it would be a beautiful addition to your campus.
    Please send me an email & I will send over the image.

  2. I’m not sure if anyone has come forward with this ability, but I’ve recently discovered I can trigger my mind to recall past dreams that I haven’t had for decades. The reason I felt this might be important to a dream study or research is, it might reveal what portion(s) of the brain are accessed during such a streaming recollection. I don’t hear any “mind’s audio” when recalling these dreams, and they somewhat just flow along in 1-2 second scenes, and by moving my eyes and pretending to look at those scenes, I can trigger the speed at which the scenes cycle to another dream. I’ve also determined over the course of about ten years that if I watch certain programs/movies while falling asleep (and keep those programs/movies playing all night) I have specific dreams. And, by replaying select portions of a program/movie, I can usually have that same (or a very similar) dream recur on demand.

    Just in case this seems unique or something worth needing more info on. Maybe everyone can do this. It’s not that I’m simply able to rememeber a dream I had, it’s more like I can tap into an area of my mind that’s storing them all, even obscure ones that I’ve had only once. Over the course of my life, I’ve always had very colorful, detailed, real-seeming dreams, most of which I can remember as soon as I awaken. But it wasn’t until recently while trying to recall a particular dream that I stumbled onto “something” in my mind that allowed pieces of my dreams to emerge without having to actually try to recall them. It was like turning on a faucet and they just flowed.

  3. Interested to read about the creative input link with your research. I’m a writer so use my dreams in my creative work, often recording them when I wake. I also remember dreams from many years ago (like the previous comment by Tom). At some points I have had lucid dreams but I’m not sure what conditions trigger this as I don’t consciously decide to have a lucid dream. On occasions when I have had lucid dreams, I’ve spent my waking day in nature, outside or with some form of relaxation/meditation beforehand.

    My dream images do not seem to relate to waking experiences e.g. I have been male in some dreams with male anatomy and inhabited animal form. Plus I meet and talk in other languages which I cannot speak in waking life.

    I would like to be a participant in a dream study. Where can I take part? I feel this is such a rich source of untapped creativity that needs to be scientifically explored.

  4. Tom, I am so excited to read your comment because I think I know exactly what you are talking about. The 1-2 second scenes from previous dreams, and the faucet fits perfectly with what I have experienced. I can’t remember the plot, but I can remember the scenes of hundreds of dreams had over many years in a short window of time. And like you, my dreams are very detailed and lifelike. I have not experienced what you talk about with the movies – that is something I should try. And Polly, parts of your comment ring true to me, too. I have dreamt that I am male, and even that I am part alien. It isn’t so much that I am those beings, but that I am experiencing a story or part of their lives from the first person point of view. And the same with the lucid dreaming. I’m curious if your dreams fall into catergories. I have maybe 30 categories of dreams I’ve come up with, and they seem to cycle. For example, I may have dreams about tsunamis and airplanes and exotic birds in my backyard for a while, and then I’ll switch and have dreams about treehouses and rope swings and college courses.

  5. I would just like to help in anyway possible if you ever need an accomplished lucid dreamer. I live two lives. My normal life and my dream life. And consequently I have two sets of memories. Im not sure if it’s a common thing to dream like I dream. But the complexity and in depth layering of my dreams along with the lucidity and what some people would probably call intriguing subject matter leads me to think otherwise. If I could be of any help to you or any colleagues in the area of dream research please let me know. Thanks. [email protected]

  6. Iam not sure about my life but my dreams are come true.

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