Talking in Dreams? Scientists Achieve First-Ever Communication Between Two People In Their Sleep
Scientists in California have turned a sci-fi like idea into reality. A company called REMspace has successfully achieved two-way communication between two people who were both asleep and lucid dreaming.
Lucid dreaming is when someone becomes aware that they are dreaming and can even control parts of the dream. This happens during the REM (Rapid Eye Movement) stage of sleep, which is when our dreams are the most vivid. The two participants in the experiment were both experienced lucid dreamers, meaning they had developed the skill to be aware that they were dreaming.
The experiment took place on September 24, Daily Mail reported. Before falling asleep, the participants were hooked up to special equipment that tracked their brain activity and sleep patterns in real time. This data was sent to a central system that monitored their dreams as they unfolded.
The first participant entered a lucid dream, and the system, recognising the brain activity linked to this state, sent a random word to the dreamer. The word was from a language created specifically for the experiment, called “Remmyo.” The word “Zhilak” was transmitted through earbuds while the participant was still dreaming. In the dream, the person heard the word and repeated it out loud. Sensors captured this spoken word and sent it back to the system.
ALSO SEE: Oldest Living Microbes Found Inside 2-Billion-Year Old Rock In Groundbreaking Discovery
A few minutes later, the second participant also entered a lucid dream. The system detected the brain activity indicating this and sent the same word, “Zhilak,” to her through earbuds. In her dream, she heard the word and repeated it as well. When she woke up, she confirmed that the word she heard in her dream was “Zhilak,” marking the first successful communication between two people in their dreams.
This breakthrough could have big implications for future research in sleep science. According to REMspace, this kind of technology might eventually help with mental health treatment, learning new skills, and other applications. However, the technology and the results need to be reviewed and replicated by other scientists to ensure its accuracy and effectiveness.
“Yesterday, communicating in dreams seemed like science fiction. Tomorrow, it will be so common we won’t be able to imagine our lives without this technology,” REMspace CEO and founder Michael Raduga reportedly said. “This opens the door to countless commercial applications, reshaping how we think about communication and interaction in the dream world.”
ALSO SEE: Earth’s ‘Vital Signs’ Have Reached Extreme Levels, Scientists Fear Irreversible Climate Disaster