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Reading Dreams

There are dreams we remember upon waking up and much that we forget. Some linger fleetingly in that place between sleep and wakefulness. To be able to record and replay all of that could reveal so much about who we are.

The researchers now want to look at deeper sleep, where the most vivid dreams are thought to occur, as well as see whether brain scans can help them to reveal the emotions, smells, colours and actions that people experience as they sleep.

Dr Mark Stokes, a cognitive neuroscientist from the University of Oxford, said it was an "exciting" piece of research that brought us closer to the concept of dream-reading machines.

Maybe having access to such technology would get us to focus inward, try to answer the question "Who Am I?" instead of wasting our lives trying to keep up with friends and strangers who over-share about their lives while taking care to edit out the flaws and blemishes to the point the most mundane moments in their day project the level of perfection we cannot achieve on our best. 

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