Fever Dreams: An Online Study. Michael Schredl and Daniel Erlacher. Front. Psychol., January 28 2020. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00053
Abstract: In addition to a large variety of somatic symptoms, fever also affects cognition, sleep, and mood. In an online survey with 164 participants, 100 fever dream reports were submitted. Fever dreams were more bizarre and more negatively toned and included more references to health and temperature perception compared to “normal” most recent dreams – findings that are in line with the continuity hypothesis of dreaming. Future studies should follow up this line of research by conducting diary studies during naturally occurring febrile illnesses and sleep laboratory studies with experimentally induced fever. It would also be very interesting to study the effect of thermal stimulation applied during sleep on dream content. This research helps to understand subjective experiences while sleeping in an extreme condition (elevated body temperature).
Discussion
The present study indicates that fever affects dreaming;
fever dreams are more bizarre – confirming the previous finding of our
pilot study (Schredl et al., 2016b)
in an independent sample – but also included more negative dream
emotions, less dream characters and interactions, and more
health-related topics and heat perceptions than the matched normal
non-fever dreams. As fever dreams have not yet been studied
systematically, it is reassuring that we were able to replicate the
pilot findings with a new independent sample indicating that the present
findings are substantial.
Before discussing the findings, several methodological
issues will be addressed. First, fever dreams were elicited
retrospectively, i.e., sometimes experienced quite some time ago. That
might have biased the results as extraordinary dreams are more likely to
be recalled after such long periods of time (Cipolli et al., 1992).
However, the time interval between occurrence of the dream and its
reporting was not related to emotional intensity or bizarreness. In
addition, the dreams selected for comparison were also retrospectively
recalled dreams. In order to test for possible recall effects using
retrospective designs, it would be very interesting to use a prospective
approach like Smith (2012b),
i.e., hand out a dream diary and instruct the participants to complete
this diary if they suffer from a febrile illness. However, one has to
keep in mind that fever does not occur that often, so this study might
be arduous. The retrospective nature of the study also does not allow
any inferences regarding the sleep stage in which the dreams occurred.
As fever can trigger episodes of sleepwalking (Avidan, 2017),
one might speculate if, for example, the first dream example is a
remembrance of a sleepwalking episode. Typically reports from NREM
parasomnia episodes can include the bed chamber but are very brief (Arnulf, 2019),
so the finding that fever dreams are generally comparable in length and
even more bizarre than “normal” dreams indicates that those reports
rarely reflect sleepwalking. However, content of sleepwalking episodes
related to fever has never been studied systematically; the subjective
experiences within these episodes might also be more bizarre compared to
“normal” sleepwalking episodes. Due to the rare occurrence of fever
episodes, ambulatory polysomnographic studies, i.e., recording the sleep
stage prior to the reported dream, are very arduous. It would also be
very interesting to study the effect of experimentally increasing body
temperature by cytokines (cf. Reichenberg et al., 2001)
on dream characteristics and content. Next, it should be noted that the
sample consisted of high dream recallers; the mean dream recall
frequency in the general population is about one morning per week with
dream recall (Schredl, 2008)
whereas in our study the mean dream recall frequency indicated dream
recall several times a week. On the other hand, reporting a fever dream
was not related to dream recall frequency but to the frequency of having
fever. But one might argue that the reported percentages of
experiencing fever dreams while being ill is an overestimation in this
study due to overall heightened dream recall and, therefore, it would be
necessary to carry out surveys in representative samples for obtaining
data as to how often fever dreams occur.
The finding that fever dreams contain more intense
negative emotions and less intense positive emotions supports the
continuity hypothesis of dreaming as fever is also accompanied by more
negative moods in waking (Reichenberg et al., 2001)
and negatively toned dreams might reflect these negative waking
emotions. This link between waking emotional tone and dream emotions has
been shown in healthy persons (Schredl and Reinhard, 2009-2010). Also, Bódizs et al. (2008)
found that poor health is related to more negatively toned dreams. To
follow up this line of thinking, future studies could elicit mood during
waking in persons with fever and test how strong waking emotions affect
dreams while being ill. Similarly, it would be interesting to test
whether the cognitive impairment in waking due to fever (Hall and Smith, 1996; Smith, 2012a)
is directly related to dream bizarreness, i.e., are dreams of persons
with more pronounced cognitive impairments more bizarre than dreams of
persons with mild cognitive impairments during a febrile illness? The
basic idea is that the “over-heated” brain is not functioning properly
and, therefore, dreams are more bizarre. In schizophrenic patients, for
example, the severity of psychotic symptoms during the day is directly
related to dream bizarreness (Schredl and Engelhardt, 2001).
Also in line with the continuity hypothesis is the
finding that fever dreams included more health-related topics. A
previous study in patients with insomnia (Schredl et al., 1998b)
showed that more health problems are associated with more
health-related dreams. Interestingly, the frequency of health-related
dreams is not only related to the frequency of the illnesses but also to
worrying about health (Schredl et al., 2016a), i.e., future studies might also include this variable.
Interestingly, the findings of less dream characters and
less physical and verbal Interactions also fit in the continuity
hypothesis because one of the accompanying behavioral changes of fever
is social withdrawal (Harden et al., 2015).
Lastly, fever dreams included more references to
temperature perception (see the illustrative second dream example) than
non-fever dreams. In a long dream series, explicit temperature
perceptions were present in only in 0.63% of the dreams (Schredl, 2016).
This increased number of temperature perceptions in fever dreams might
reflect the waking-life experience of feeling hot, within the framework
of the continuity hypothesis, but it is also plausible that the fever
dreams might be affected by the internal sensation of feeling hot while
sleeping. Research has shown that external stimuli like sounds, water
spray, rocking of the bed, and mild pain stimuli are sometimes
incorporated into dreams (Dement and Wolpert, 1958; Nielsen et al., 1993; Leslie and Ogilvie, 1996).
Interestingly, somatosensory stimulation of the leg muscles was
incorporated into dreams quite often and could result in bizarreness
related to the body image (Nielsen, 1993);
the dream examples might also reflect a very creative processing of the
internal heat stimulus. However, studies on the effect on dreams of
thermal stimulation, e.g., thermal stimuli applied to the skin, have not
yet been performed. If heat stimuli are incorporated into dreams, the
hypothesis that fever directly affects dreams via the increased body
temperature would be supported.
To summarize, this study showed that fever dreams are
quite common and differ significantly from non-fever dreams, i.e., fever
dreams were more bizarre, more negatively toned and included more
references to health and temperature perception. Future studies should
follow up this line of research by conducting diary studies during
naturally occurring febrile illnesses and sleep laboratory studies with
experimentally induced fever. This research helps to understand
subjective experiences while sleeping in an extreme condition.
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