Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. 4. Feb. 2010 · Subscribed. 3.7K. 575K views 14 years ago. 1982) Classix Nouveaux was one of the first new romantic acts in England. Although Classix Nouveaux's more guitar-heavy sound separated them from the...

    • 4 Min.
    • 577K
    • Ignazio Deddu
  2. 8. Dez. 2013 · 683. 52K views 10 years ago. The original members of this vocal group from Harlem, New York, USA, were Joe Duncan (lead), Herman Curtis (first tenor), William Walker (second tenor), Melvin Walton...

    • 3 Min.
    • 55,5K
    • MANNY MORA
  3. Is it a dream ?, by Sal Solo (Classix Nouveaux), official video (1982). Full video restored (4k), HQ audio.℗ Parlophone Records Ltd., a Warner Music Group Co...

    • 4 Min.
    • 4,4K
    • TheRover98TB
    • Overview
    • We Dream Every Night
    • We Forget Most of Our Dreams
    • Not All Dreams Are in Color
    • Men and Women Dream Differently
    • Animals Probably Dream
    • You Can Control Your Dreams
    • Negative Dreams Are More Common
    • Blind People May Dream Visually
    • You're Paralyzed While Dreaming

    Trending Videos

    We spend roughly one-third of our lives sleeping—and during that time, we dream. Many theories exist to explain why we dream, but researchers still don't know for sure. Some believe dreams have symbolic meaning, whereas others believe that they relate to waking life.

    The brain is active all night long. Brain activity in the forebrain and midbrain is particularly intense during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which is when we dream.

    Adults and babies alike dream for around two hours per night, even if they don't remember it. In fact, researchers have found that people usually have several dreams each night, each typically lasting for five to 20 minutes.

    During a typical lifetime, people spend an average of six years dreaming.

    What Is the Activation-Synthesis Model of Dreaming?

    7 Theories on Why We Dream Simplified

    We forget up to 95% of all dreams shortly after waking. According to one theory about why dreams are so difficult to remember, changes in the brain during sleep don't support the information processing and storage needed to form memories. Brain scans of sleepers have shown that the frontal lobes—the area that plays a key role in memory formation—are inactive during REM sleep, the stage in which dreaming occurs. We might also forget our dreams because of changes in the levels of certain neurotransmitters, specifically acetylcholine and norepinephrine, during REM sleep. Yet another study found a link between dream recall and the brain matter density of the medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC). Participants with higher white matter density reported higher dream recall.

    Most people report dreaming in color, but roughly 12% of people claim to dream only in black and white.

    In studies in which dreamers have been awakened and asked to select colors that match those in their dreams, people chose soft pastel colors most frequently.

    Researchers have found differences between men and women in dream content.

    In several studies, men reported dreaming about weapons significantly more often than women did, whereas women dreamed about clothing more often than men.

    Another study showed that men's dreams tend to have more aggressive content and physical activity, whereas women's dreams contain more rejection and exclusion, as well as more conversation than physical activity.

    Women tend to have slightly longer dreams with more characters. Men dream about other men twice as often as they do about women; women tend to dream about both sexes equally.

    Many think that, when a sleeping dog wags its tail or a sleeping cat swats its paws, it's dreaming. Although no one can say for sure, researchers believe that most animals go through REM and non-REM sleep stages, so they probably do dream.

    Animals might not experience dreams in the same way as humans, however. In other words, they might not remember images or attach a storyline to them.

    A lucid dream is one in which you're aware that you're dreaming even though you're still asleep.

    Lucid dreaming is thought to be a combination of consciousness and REM sleep, during which you can direct or control the dream content.

    People can learn how to have lucid dreams using various techniques, including mnemonic induction of lucid dreams (MILD) and senses-initiated lucid dreams (SSILD). These involve waking up after five hours and repeating a phrase like "I will remember my dream," or focusing on the stimuli (sights, sounds, sensations) in your sleep environment, respectively.

    Approximately half of all people can remember at least one instance of lucid dreaming, and some are able to have lucid dreams frequently.

    Researcher Calvin S. Hall, Ph.D., collected more than 50,000 dream accounts from college students over more than 40 years. Made available to the public in the 1990s by Hall's student, William Domhoff, the dream accounts reported many emotions during dreams.

    Several factors affect the emotional content of dreams, including anxiety, stress, and certain medications. One study found that external stimuli, including good and bad smells, can play a role in positive and negative dreams.

    The most common emotion experienced in dreams is anxiety. Generally, negative emotions are much more common than positive ones.

    How to Interpret Dreams

    In one study of people who have been blind since birth, they still seemed to experience visual imagery in their dreams, and they had eye movements that correlated to visual dream recall.

    Although they had fewer eye movements during REM sleep than the sighted participants, the blind participants reported the same dream sensations, including visual content.

    REM sleep is characterized by paralysis of the voluntary muscles. This phenomenon is known as REM atonia and prevents you from acting out your dreams while you're asleep. Basically, because motor neurons are not stimulated, your body does not move.

    In some cases, this paralysis can even carry over into the waking state for as long as 10 minutes, a condition known as sleep paralysis.

    • 2 Min.
  4. Listen to Is It A Dream by Classix Nouveaux. See lyrics and music videos, find Classix Nouveaux tour dates, buy concert tickets, and more!

  5. How queer it is to see only one being in the world, to have only one thought in one's mind, only one desire in the heart, and only one name on the lips — a name which comes up continually, rising, like the water in a spring, from the depths of the soul to the lips, a name which one repeats over and over again, which one whispers ceaselessly, eve...

  6. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for Is It A Dream by Classix Nouveaux. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.