4.5 Article

Extending mental practice to sleep: Enhancing motor skills through lucid dreaming

Journal

MEDICAL HYPOTHESES
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.mehy.2023.111066

Keywords

Lucid dreaming; Motor practice; Mental practice; Motor learning; Sports practice

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Improving motor performance through mental practice, such as lucid dreaming, has been proven feasible through decades of research. Lucid dreaming allows the intentional simulation of motor tasks with realistic impressions, potentially enhancing subsequent wakefulness performance. Experimental studies have shown promising improvements in motor performance after lucid dreaming practice, supported by similarities in brain activity, eye movements, muscle activity, and autonomic responses compared to physical practice. However, placebo effects, motivation increases, and practical challenges need to be addressed for further investigation and implementation in various disciplines.
Improving motor performance without physical movements might seem counterintuitive, however, decades of research on mental practice have demonstrated its feasibility. The phenomenon of lucid dreaming - i.e. becoming aware of the current dream state during ongoing sleep - bears some resemblance to mental practice: behaviors such as motor tasks can be intentionally simulated with mental imagery. During lucid dreaming, however, the brain generates a highly immersive, VR-like environment and realistic proprioceptive impressions to match the mental practitioner's needs. In recent years the hypothesis was thus proposed that lucid dreaming can be used to extend motor practice to the sleeping state, thereby improving motor performance during subsequent wake-fulness. Here, we examine this hypothesis by exploring the theoretical foundations and efficacy of this inventive approach in sports science and beyond. Experimental studies show promising performance improvements after lucid dreaming motor practice. Similarities have been observed in brain activity, eye movements, muscle ac-tivity, and autonomic responses compared to physical practice support the potential of lucid dreaming practice. Surveys show that athlete populations already implement lucid dreaming practice as part of their training. Po-tential placebo effects and an increase in motivation after lucid dreaming practice in the post-test should be investigated in future studies. Also, some well-known practical challenges of lucid dream research, such as its rarity, lack of proper training, and lack of control over the dream, need to be addressed. Eliminating these limitations will strengthen the potential of this inventive approach and enable lucid dreaming practice to be incorporated into various disciplines in the future.

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