Litcius/Paper detail

Predictive coding, multisensory integration, and attentional control: A multicomponent framework for lucid dreaming

Péter Simor, Tamás Bogdány, Philippe Peigneux

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lucid dreaming (LD) is a mental state in which we realize not being awake but are dreaming while asleep. It often involves vivid, perceptually intense dream images as well as peculiar kinesthetic sensations, such as flying, levitating, or out-of-body experiences. LD is in the cross-spotlight of cognitive neuroscience and sleep research as a particular case to study consciousness, cognition, and the neural background of dream experiences. Here, we present a multicomponent framework for the study and understanding of neurocognitive mechanisms and phenomenological aspects of LD. We propose that LD is associated with prediction error signals arising during sleep and occurring at higher or lower levels of the processing hierarchy. Prediction errors are resolved by generating a superordinate self-model able to integrate ambiguous stimuli arriving from sensory periphery and higher-order cortical regions. While multisensory integration enables lucidity maintenance and contributes to peculiar kinesthetic experiences, attentional control facilitates multisensory integration by dynamically regulating the balance between the influence of top-down mental models and the precision weighting of bottom-up sensory inputs. Our novel framework aims to link neural correlates of LD with current concepts of sleep and arousal regulation and provide testable predictions on interindividual differences in LD as well as neurocognitive mechanisms inducing lucid dreams.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyMultisensory integrationCognitive psychologyNeurocognitiveCognitionDreamSensory systemConsciousnessNeural correlates of consciousnessNeuroscienceSleep and Wakefulness ResearchSleep and related disordersNeural dynamics and brain function