People who take supplemental melatonin report an increase in vividness, frequency and duration of dreams. Melatonin is made by the brain, and there is much scientific research on levels of melatonin and mediation.
The "scientific answer" for dreams would depend on what the question might be. Any "answer" also would correspond to the area of science being considered, whether analytical psychology, behavioral psychology, the anatomy and function of the brain, research on sleep patterns and cycles, or anthropological studies of myths and symbols in various cultures. The sites linked below suggest a number of possible entries into different areas of science concerned with dreams and dreaming.
scientific dreams are the most important
The scientific or taxonomic name would be Rosa 'Forgotten Dreams'.
Nocturnal emissions, also known as wet dreams, are a natural physiological phenomenon typically experienced by males during sleep. There is no specific scientific name for wet dreams.
Yes....People can share dreams by telling each other about their dreams or by writing about their dreams. It is not possible to "share" dreams while sleeping, in the way dreams were "shared" in the movie Inception. Such ideas have no scientific basis; they are science fiction.
Progressive Technologist Building Scientific Dreams
Some people think that dreams are the brain trying to process events you have not had a chance to think through properly whilst awake. There are others who think there is personal significance to dreams. Most likely, if you do not assign any personal importance to your dreams you will not find any meaning in them. However if you choose to look more deeply into them you may find they have personal significance. It is hard to be strictly scientific about dreams are they are quite subjective and cannot be easily measured by anyone besides the dreamer.
Dreams are just that dreams. Our thoughts gather throughout the day and in the end when we lay down they mix together to form our dreams. Of course not all people believe this but this is the scientific theory so to speak. Don't read into it.
No. You can't make your dreams come true, unless the dream is a fairly realistic one, such as forgetting to wear pants. Dreams that include fantismal or scientific anomolies, however, could never possibly come true.
it dreams about a scientific geological spiz colaps that damges the whole space time continum and also bums in a park
There is no scientific evidence to suggest that one gender dreams more than the other. Both boys and girls can have vivid dreams, influenced by a variety of factors such as lifestyle, emotions, and sleep patterns. Dreaming is a universal human experience that occurs during the REM stage of sleep for both males and females.
There are about a dozen solid, researched and peer reviewed medical and scientific theories on why we dream. Psychosomatic theory, continual-activation theory, dreams as resonance in neural circuits, dreams as excitations of long-term memory and activation synthesis theory are but a few.What's clear is that dreams cannot foresee the future and many times dreams don't mean anything at all.
because they were created by god and god cannot be proved by science