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Query: UMLS:C0028738 (
nystagmus
)
7,431
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eye movements (with closed lids) were studied in a group of highly hypnotizable experimental subjects experienced in self-hypnosis, and compared with a random sample of control subjects that had never been hypnotized and were low in waking suggestibility. Approximately half the experimental subjects rolled their eyes upwards to a greater extent when hypnosis was induced than during eye closure while awake. In some subjects eye flutter occurred during hypnosis, but not in the awake condition. During passive hypnosis the mean rates of rapid eye movements were lower, but those of slow eye movements were higher than during the resting awake condition of the same subjects or the random control subjects. The mean rates of horizontal eye movements during suggestions about begin in a train and watching passing telephone poles were higher for the experimental subjects in the hypnosis and 'imagination' sessions than that of the random control group in the imagination session. A proportion of the experimental subjects made more lateral eye movements during hypnosis than during the imagination session, but an equal proportion did not differ between the two conditions. The mean rates and durations of horizontal eye movements during dreaming about a tennis match were greater during hypnosis ('hypnotic'
dream
), than during the awake condition a few minutes later ('natural'
dream
), or the awake condition in the imagination session ('imagination'
dream
) of the same subjects or random controls. The performance and subjective involvement of the experimental subjects during the Barber suggestibility scale, '
nystagmus
' suggestions and 'dreaming' did not differ significantly between the two hypnosis sessions, but in most cases were significantly greater during hypnosis than during the imagination session of the same group or the random control group.
...
PMID:Hypnosis and eye movements. 16 21
Based on supportive evidence, it is proposed in this paper that rapid eye movements during paradoxical sleep actually represent
nystagmus
, the latter due to the occurrence of conflicting perceptions of bodily position in space. During rapid eye movements in sleep, the brain's perception of bodily position in a
dream
is opposed to the sensory perception of the dreamer's sleeping position. The split in perception triggers
nystagmus
, a physiological mechanism known to accompany motion sickness and other waking forms of spatial sense distortion. Supportive evidence from studies on motion sickness,
nystagmus
, and sleep is presented. A number of experiments are suggested to lend validity to the hypothesis.
...
PMID:Rapid eye movement during sleep considered as nystagmus. 377 65
Despite decades of research, the question of whether the rapid eye movements (REMs) of paradoxical sleep (PS) are equivalent to waking saccades and whether their direction is congruent with visual spatial events in the
dream
scene is still very controversial. We gained an insight into these questions through the study of a right brain damaged patient suffering attentional neglect for the left side of space and drop of the optokinetic
nystagmus
(OKN) with alternating rightward slow/leftward fast phases evoked by rightward optic flow. During PS the patient had frequent Nystagmoid REMs with alternating leftward slow/rightward fast phases and reported dreams with visual events evoking corresponding OKN such as a train running leftward. By contrast, just as in waking OKN, Nystagmoid REMs with alternating rightward slow/leftward fast phases were virtually absent. REMs followed by staring eye position or by consecutive REMs were also observed: these showed no asymmetry comparable to that of Nystagmoid ones. The selective disappearance of Nystagmoid REMs in one horizontal direction proves, for the first time, that in humans different types of REMs exists and that these are driven by different premotor mechanisms. Concomitant drop of OKN and Nystagmoid REMs toward the same horizontal direction demonstrates that phylogenetically ancient oculomotor mechanisms, such as the OKN, are shared by waking and PS. On this evidence and converging findings from animal, neuropsychological and brain imaging studies, a new evolutionary account of
dream
bizarreness is proposed. Classification and labelling of the different types of REMs are also provided.
...
PMID:The "ways" we look at dreams: evidence from unilateral spatial neglect (with an evolutionary account of dream bizarreness). 1709 Dec 97