Question 1: What does sleepwalking mean? Sleepwalking is the strange phenomenon of getting out of bed during sleep and then returning to bed to continue sleeping.
Question 2: What is sleepwalking, and what is the difference between sleepwalking and dreaming? 1. General characteristics of sleepwalking
Sleepwalking is obviously a modified state of consciousness. The patient loses contact with his surroundings and seems to live in a private world. Sometimes he gets very excited and even talks a lot of nonsense, making it difficult for people around him to understand what he is saying. He seemed to be engaged in a very meaningful activity. This activity is often a symbolic re-enactment of his repressed painful experiences. After the sleepwalking ends, the patient knows nothing about the sleepwalking.
2. The diagnostic criteria of DSM-III in the "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders" DSM-III is the latest definition of sleepwalking in psychology, which mainly includes the following five points:
(1) Frequent behavior of getting up and walking during sleep, usually occurs in the first third period of the main sleep stage.
(2) When sleepwalking, the patient's facial expression is dull and basically does not respond to other people's sexual intercourse. It is also difficult for the sleepwalker to be forcibly awakened.
(3) When awake (whether after the sleepwalking ends or the next morning), the patient has mostly forgotten everything that happened during the sleepwalking.
(4) Within a few minutes after waking up from the sleepwalking state, the patient's mental activities and behaviors were not impaired (although the patient was confused and disoriented at the first moment of waking up).
(5) There are no organic factors such as epilepsy involved in the initiation and progression of sleepwalking.
Why sleepwalking occurs
1. Hypnosis theory When Mesmer first founded hypnosis, he discovered that hypnotized people often experience sleepwalking symptoms. According to the modern classification criteria of hypnosis, somnambulism is the deepest state that can be induced by hypnosis. If the hypnotist induces the hypnotized person into a sleepwalking state and orders the hypnotized person to do some daily tasks, the hypnotized person can complete it as well as in the normal state. The principle of hypnosis is to generate an exciting center in the brain center based on verbal suggestions, while inhibiting activity in other parts of the brain. The same is true for sleepwalking. Part of the brain center is excited, while other parts are still sleeping.
Bohamlu conducted a post-hypnotic suggestion experiment to prove that post-hypnotic suggestion can make people experience hallucinations that are as realistic as reality. This experiment was conducted like this:
I hypnotized a woman who was intelligent, sensitive, but not hysterical at all. I gave her a very complex post-hypnotic suggestion that stimulated all her senses. Everyone can participate. I suggested that she heard military music in the hospital courtyard and soldiers coming up the stairs to enter the room…. A drunken musician came up to talk nonsense and wanted to hug her. She slapped him twice and called to the nurse and head nurse. Soon the nurse arrived and chased the drunk away. The above scenes are all described to the hypnotized person during hypnosis. As a result, when she woke up, she vividly experienced the above-mentioned scenes. She had never had the same hallucination before, and now she couldn't get rid of it. She looked left and right, asking the other patients if they had seen what had just happened. She cannot distinguish between reality and hallucination. When it was all over, I told her: "This is just an illusion that I hinted to you." She just believed that the scene just now was indeed an illusion, but she insisted that it was almost the same as reality, much more realistic than a dream.
After the patient wakes up from the hypnotic state, he forgets everything that happened during the hypnosis process. Not long after, he experienced realistic hallucinations due to the influence of post-hypnotic suggestion. This experiment provides a model for the explanation of somnambulism: like the hypnotized person, the somnambulist is simply a hallucinatory rehearsal of a pre-designed script. Of course, this explanation is only an approximate metaphor.
2. Psychoanalytic theory
Freud believed that sleepwalking is a manifestation of subconsciously suppressed emotions that attack at the appropriate time. Indeed, sleepwalking patients always have some painful experiences. In fact, sleepwalking can be explained intuitively using psychoanalytic theory: when the id's power accumulates to a certain extent, they break through the vigilance of the on-duty self. Facing the surging power of the ego, the self on duty can only escape and ignore it. Some of the self on duty are even captured as assistants, because a person's words and deeds are the responsibility of the self. After the ego had been fooling around for a while and consumed a lot of energy, the ego's duty officer immediately drove the ego back to the cage. In order to escape the punishment of the superego, the self-duty person conceals the truth. As a result, the sleepwalker will know nothing about what just happened when he wakes up. Although the above explanation is almost a fantasy, it makes sense logically. ...>>
Question 3: What does it mean when women always say they are sleepwalking? It depends on what the state of your relationship was like when she said this
If she answers like this when you ask him some questions
It means she doesn’t want to answer. This question
If she answers this question during a normal chat, it means that she does not want to talk to you
The above two situations are within the scope of online chat
Question 4: What are the symptoms of sleepwalking? Sleepwalking (somnambulate) is a common physiological phenomenon.
There are many ways to sleepwalk, ranging from the ordinary to the bizarre.
Some patients with sleepwalking will involuntarily get up from bed and talk nonsense after falling asleep; they may even get dressed in an orderly manner and cook a meal; or after running outside for a spin, He went back to sleep in bed, and when he woke up the next day, he had no memory of what happened during the night.
It was reported that a medical student suffered from sleepwalking. He often got up alone at night, walked to the anatomy room, broke into the door, bit the nose of the corpse with his mouth, and then returned to the dormitory to lie down and sleep. Not long after the incident, the school discovered that many corpses had missing noses. After careful investigation, the truth was revealed.
The duration of sleepwalking also varies. It is said that there was a sleepwalking patient in France named Yon Alio, who sleepwalked for 20 years at a time. One night, he suddenly got up after falling asleep, left his wife and 5-year-old daughter, and came to London, England. There he found a job, married another wife, and had a son. One night more than 20 years later, he suddenly understood and hurried back to France. The next morning, Alio woke up. When his French wife saw her gray-haired husband, who had been missing for more than 20 years, she asked with a mixture of sadness and joy: "My dear, where have you escaped to? There has been no news for more than 20 years." However, Alio stretched himself and Said nonchalantly: "Don't be kidding! Didn't I sleep well last night?"
How does sleepwalking form? Research shows that sleepwalking is mainly the result of human cerebral cortex activity. Brain activity includes two processes: "excitation" and "inhibition". Normally, when a person is sleeping, cells in the cerebral cortex are in a state of inhibition. If one or more groups of nerve cells that control movement are still in an excited state at this time, sleepwalking will occur. The range of dream movements is often the environment that the sleepwalker is most familiar with and the actions he often performs repeatedly.
Sleepwalking is often a topic that people talk about. People are very surprised by the phenomenon of sleepwalking, and at the same time, they also have a series of obvious prejudices against sleepwalking. Most people think that sleepwalkers bump around like blind people. In fact, sleepwalkers' eyes are half or fully open, and they walk in the same way as usual. Ordinary people also think that sleepwalkers are extremely courageous and dare to do some thrilling and terrifying actions. In fact, sleepwalkers rarely do anything out of the ordinary, and they rarely engage in harmful offensive behaviors while sleepwalking. Of course, sleepwalkers sometimes fall and get bruised due to distraction. Ordinary people also have a prejudice that sleepwalkers should not be woken up casually, because sleepwalkers who suddenly wake up will be frightened and go crazy. In fact, it is difficult for a sleepwalker to be awakened. Even if he is awakened, he will not go crazy, just feel confused. Some people think that sleepwalking is actually dreaming, but psychologists have observed that sleepwalking often occurs in the non-rapid eye movement period when dreaming is rare.
According to statistics, the number of sleepwalkers accounts for about 1 to 6% of the total population. Most of them are children and men, especially those who are lively and imaginative. Most of them have appeared several times. Most adults who suffer from sleepwalking are carryovers from childhood. If children who have experienced sleepwalking only once are included, the occurrence rate of sleepwalking is about 25%. Generally speaking, sleepwalking in children is not a serious problem. In contrast, adult sleepwalking is much rarer, but it is a pathological behavior. Let’s take a look at the specific characteristics of sleepwalking.
When treating sleepwalking, psychological treatment and drug treatment must be carried out at the same time. Bad mental factors should be removed, anxiety, fear and tension should be eliminated, their environment should be improved, and they should pay attention to a balance between work and rest and physical exercise; at the same time, appropriate doses of sedative and sleeping drugs, such as diazepam and diazepam, should be supplemented according to their different ages. Tong, chlordiazepoxide, etc. According to reports, patients who take imipramine orally before going to bed under the guidance of a doctor also have good results. When sleepwalking first attacks, waking him up in time is also an effective measure.
Analysis of the causes of sleepwalking
1. Hypnosis theory When Mesmer first founded hypnosis, he discovered that hypnotized people often experience sleepwalking symptoms. According to the modern classification criteria of hypnosis, somnambulism is the deepest state that can be induced by hypnosis. If the hypnotist induces the hypnotized person into a sleepwalking state and orders the hypnotized person to do some daily tasks, the hypnotized person can complete it as well as in the normal state. The principle of hypnosis is to generate an exciting center in the brain center based on verbal suggestions, while inhibiting activity in other parts of the brain. The same is true for sleepwalking. Part of the brain center is excited, while other parts are still sleeping.
Bohamlu...>>
Question 5: What is sleepwalking? When people sleep, most of the cells and neurons in the brain are in a "resting" state!
At this time, breathing, heartbeat, and metabolism are all in a "trough" or low activity state!
Sleepwalking is a phenomenon that occurs when some of the human nerve cells suddenly or not "rest" at all, while most of the other control cells are active during rest! Call it "sleepwalking." It can be understood that this is the case, but the specific reason is not yet clear.
However, this kind of sleepwalking can be controlled. People who have sleepwalking have a certain relationship with anxiety in daily life or mental depression caused by hard study and work! The proportion of students who are in a bad mental state and who are about to take exams are sleepwalking than those in other industries.
If it is really caused by this aspect, you should learn to relax and not let yourself become nervous. For example, go to the amusement park, go on a trip (preferably hiking), take a sauna and then have a good sleep... If it is serious, you can see a psychiatrist!
Question 6: What does the League of Legends keyword "sleepwalking" mean? The rhythm is wrong, that is, there is no consciousness, as if you are alone, and you are not in the same rhythm as your teammates
Question 7 : What does it mean to be sleepwalking all day long? It may mean that you are in a trance and have difficulty concentrating. Question 8: Why do people sleepwalk? What will be the performance? Because sleepwalking is potentially dangerous. Talking in sleep: Revealing deepest secrets? In "Qiu Deng Cong Hua" written by Wang Zhi of the Qing Dynasty, there is such a record. The author translated it into vernacular as follows: "My tribesman so-and-so often gets up from bed and opens the door when he sleeps until midnight. He went out, walked around the village, and soon returned to the house to sleep again, but he didn't know it. Later, he and his relatives and friends were engaged in the maritime trade. Everyone was afraid that his previous problems would relapse, and he would fall asleep every time he slept on the boat. He was tied to the bed for a long time, but one night he was untied. He suddenly got up in his bedroom, opened the hatch, walked into the sea, and was swallowed up by the ocean." "My relatives hired a new servant named Li. When he went to bed at night, he would suddenly sit up from the bed, sing loudly, and then fall back to sleep after singing. Everyone asked him, but they only heard him snoring loudly, and had no idea at all. One night, the thief sneaked into the inner house and just climbed up the wall. Li suddenly jumped up from the bed and danced as if he was acting. The thief was shocked and fell off the wall when everyone heard the sound. He got up to check and caught the thief, but Li Mouyi was still singing loudly in his sleep. "The first story is about "Sleepwalking", and the second story is about "Sleeptalking". There are many such records in ancient books. The traditional view is that "sleepwalking" and "sleep talking" are a kind of "active dream". "Sleepwalking" is not a dream, but "sleep walking". The so-called "sleepwalking" refers to a person getting up from bed and wandering around in a state of obvious sleepiness. Although it can occur in people of any age (as long as they can walk), it is most common in children aged 6 to 12 years old, and less common in adults. Sleepwalking usually occurs in the first 1/3 of sleep, that is, within two to three hours after falling asleep. The duration of sleepwalking varies from person to person, ranging from just a few minutes to half an hour or 40 minutes. Children with sleepwalking tendencies often just get out of bed in a daze, repeatedly perform some stereotyped or purposeless actions, such as constantly pinching the quilt with their hands, and then fall back to sleep. However, a small number of adults and some have more "tricks" in their sleepwalking. They will get up from the bed and walk around. They may go to other rooms in the house or outdoors. Some simply walk around and may walk into the house. Other room movements, such as opening the door, getting dressed, moving furniture, and even driving (one case drove out while sleepwalking, and did not wake up until a car accident occurred.) The sleepwalker's eyes are open or half closed, But he appears to be lackadaisical and does not look around, but when encountering obstacles, he usually avoids them automatically. His movements were slow and stiff, a bit robotic. If he speaks, it is usually incoherent sleep talk. If you ask him "Where are he going?" or "What time is it now"? He usually won't answer your questions. There are no documented cases of anyone talking to a sleepwalker, but if you command him to "go back to bed," he will usually obey, go back to bed, and continue his sleep. If a swimming person is shaken vigorously to wake him up, he will often have a reaction of not knowing where he is after waking up. At the end of the sleepwalking period, sleepwalkers usually return to bed on their own and continue to sleep, but sometimes they fall down to sleep and wake up the next morning with a look of panic on their faces, not knowing why they slept here. What happened is no longer remembered. Sleepwalking has a family genetic tendency. Sleepwalking is more common in children and teenagers. According to statistics, 15% of children have at least one experience of sleepwalking, and about 1% to 6% of regular sleepwalkers. But when they grow up, It usually disappears automatically. Sleepwalking is less common in adults, but it is more chronic (recurrent), and almost everyone has experienced sleepwalking when they were children. Sleepwalking has a strong familial tendency, and males are more common than females. If one of the identical twins sleepwalks, there is a high chance that the other will also sleepwalk, indicating that sleepwalking may have a genetic factor. Someone reported that a couple and their four children were sleepwalking. One time at 3 o'clock in the morning, the whole family got out of bed and gathered at the dining table until a child accidentally knocked over a chair and made a loud noise. The whole family just woke up. Observations in sleep laboratories show that sleepwalkers are mostly "deep sleepers". After falling asleep, they sleep deeper than the average person, are more difficult to wake up, and have fewer dreams. Children with sleepwalking have higher rates of bedwetting and night terrors than normal children, and the rates of central nervous system infection, injury, and epilepsy are also higher than normal.
Sleepwalking is swimming in deep sleep, so if you are too tired during the day or have slept too hard in the past few nights... >>