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Re: More than half of bad dreams people experience now revolve around the pandemic  

By: ribit in 6TH POPE | Recommend this post (1)
Thu, 01 Oct 20 4:28 PM | 26 view(s)
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More than half of bad dreams people experience now revolve around the pandemic
By: Decomposed
in 6TH POPE
Thu, 01 Oct 20 8:00 AM
Msg. 06759 of 60014

Mine revolve around Joe Biden winning the White House. ribit's revolve around Stacey Abrams in track shoes.

September 30, 2020

How Covid has infected your SLEEP: More than half of nightmares now revolve around the pandemic, study finds

• Quarter of people in study suffered more frequent bad dreams during lockdown
• Scientists identified 20 dream clusters, with 55 per cent related to pandemic
• Images causing sleepless nights included accidentally giving someone a hug

by LUKE ANDREWS FOR MAILONLINE

Cleared supermarket shelves, bans on visiting the pub and the construction of giant emergency hospitals may feel like something out of a horror movie.

But scientists have found Covid-19 really is the stuff of nightmares.

More than half of 800 volunteers quizzed about their dreams revealed they endured distressing images linked to the pandemic.

And a quarter of participants — who were from Finland — told how they now suffer more frequent bad dreams than before the 'apocalyptic ambience' of lockdown set in.

Images causing sufferers to toss and turn included accidentally giving someone a hug, being stuck in a crowd, enjoying a party and catching the virus itself.


A quarter of people suffered more frequent bad dreams during lockdown, a paper has claimed. Dreams included accidentally giving someone a hug.

Scientists looked for 'dream clusters' by asking the participants to note down their dreams each morning between March 28 and April 15.

In order to find any pattern, their words were then fed into an algorithm which scanned for repeated word-associations, or clusters, and word-pairs.
'We are all sharing the same vivid dreams', say experts.

Millions of people around the world have been suffering the same vivid dreams since the coronavirus pandemic struck, experts have said.

The horrors of Covid-19, and the frightening ways it has upended daily life, is infecting dreams and exposing feelings of fear, isolation and grief, according to a range of psychologists.

'As far as I know, no one has dream samples from the flu pandemic of 1918 - and that would probably be the most comparable thing,' Harvard University professor Deidre Barrett told the Associated Press on Tuesday.

'Now we just all have our smartphones by our bed, so you can just reach over and speak it or type it down. Recording our dreams has never been easier.'

Barrett, who previously studied the dreams of 9/11 survivors and British prisoners of war in World War II, has already collected 6,000 dream samples from about 2,400 people during the current coronavirus crisis.

According to Barrett, many people dream they are sick with Covid-19 or are overcome by what seem to be stand-ins for the virus: swarms of bugs, slithering worms, witches, grasshoppers with fangs.

Meanwhile, others dream of losing control. In one such dream, the dreamer was held down by infected people who coughed on her. In another, the dreamer came across bands of people shooting at random strangers.

The study also used sleep and stress data from 3,200 further participants, as well as the 800 whose dreams were examined, to establish whether bad dreams were happening more frequently.

The researchers, from the University of Helsinki, found 20 nightmare clusters, with 55 per cent linked to the pandemic.

In one cluster, labelled 'disregard of distancing', it included the word-pairs of: mistake-hug, hug-handshake, handshake-restriction, handshake-distancing, distancing-disregard, distancing-crowd, crowd-restriction and crowd-party.

Study lead author Dr Anu-Katriina Pesonen said they were 'thrilled' to observe repeating dream content associations that 'reflected the apocalyptic ambience of Covid-19 lockdown'.

'The results allowed us to speculate that dreaming in extreme circumstances reveal shared visual imagery and memory traces, and in this way, dreams can indicate some form of shared mindscape across individuals,' she said.

'The idea of a shared imagery reflected in dreams is intriguing.'

The study, published in the journal Frontiers in Psychology, used participants in Finland, which had a national lockdown from March 28 to April 15 — the start and end date used in the research.

It recorded as many as 211 new cases of coronavirus on April 6 at the height of the pandemic, and to date has seen 345 deaths from the virus.

Britain and the US, however, suffered a far greater impact from the coronavirus, with both country's yet to formally lift their lockdown restrictions.

The UK has recorded 446,000 cases of the virus to date, and as many as 42,072 deaths.

It is currently experiencing a second spike in infections. But experts say this should not be compared to the peak in late March and April because the testing system was not up-and-running.

The US is experiencing one of the worst outbreaks of coronavirus in the world, with 7.22million cases and 206,000 deaths due to the virus recorded to date. Yesterday the country identified a further 36,847 cases of the virus.



Daily Mail columnist Susanna Reid last week revealed how the coronavirus pandemic gave her 'crippling nightmares' where she would wake up 'screaming and crying'.

The Good Morning Britain host, 49, said her anxiety struggles started as the first cases in the UK were identified in March, and how she has found the whole experience 'very frightening'.

During an interview with The Telegraphs’ Stella Magazine, Susanna explained: 'It was an anxious time for everybody, but those early days were very frightening.

'I started to have really vivid, terrifying nightmares where I would wake up screaming and crying even though I couldn’t quite remember what the nightmares were.'

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8788841/More-half-bad-dreams-people-experience-revolve-pandemic.html


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