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The borderlands of waking: Quantifying the transition from reflective thought to hallucination in sleep onset
Affiliation:1. School of Chemistry & Physics, Univ. of Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia;2. CSIRO Astronomy & Space Science, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia;3. School of Physics & Astronomy, Univ. of Southampton, SO17 1BJ, United Kingdom;4. ECAP, Univ. of Erlangen-Nuremberg, 91058 Erlangen, Germany;5. ASTRON, 7990 AA Dwingeloo, The Netherlands
Abstract:We lose waking consciousness spontaneously and regularly over the circadian cycle. It seems that every time we fall asleep, reflective thinking gradually gives way to our interactions with an imaginary, hallucinatory world that brings multimodal experiences in the absence of adequate external stimuli. The present study investigates this transition, proposing a new measure of hallucinatory states. Reflective thinking and motor imagery were quantified in 150 mentation reports provided by 16 participants after forced awakenings from different physiology-monitored time intervals after sleep onset. Cognitive agency analysis and motor agency analysis – which are objective (grammatical–semantic) tools derived from linguistic theories – show (i) a decrease in reflective thinking which sleepers would need to acknowledge the hallucinatory quality of their state, and (ii) an increase in motor imagery, indicating interactions with a hallucinatory world. By mapping these spontaneous changes in human consciousness onto physiology, we can in the long run explore the conditions of its decline, and possibilities for treatment.
Keywords:Consciousness  Dreaming  Motor imagery  Linguistics  Mentation reports  Hypnagogic hallucinations  Schizophrenia
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