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Volume 17, Number 3, Year 2015


Reduction of Dream Bizarreness in Impaired Frontal Cortex Activity: A Case Report

C. Colace, P. Salotti, and M. Ferreira


We report here the case of a 74-year-old woman suffering from chronic degenerative disease at initial stage that reported a deficit of cerebral activity in the frontal lobes, particularly in the dorsolateral pre-frontal and operculo-insular portions, for which there are neuropsychological and neuroimaging data available, as well as data on dreaming and dream bizarreness. While the patient reports no changes in sleep quality and in dreaming activity (she can still dream), she reports changes in the bizarreness and length of her dreams (both reduced) and in the frequency of nightmares (increased). Since the cerebral areas in which our patient shows a deficit are involved in some functions (e.g., moral decision-making abilities, inhibition and suppression of inappropriate response tendencies, etc.) covered by superego and dream censorship concepts, we suggest that the reduction of dream bizarreness may be interpreted in the light of Freud�s explanation of dream bizarreness as a result of a deficit in censorship activity.


Keywords: Disguise-censorship hypothesis, dream bizarreness, neuropsychology, superego, neuroimaging, psychoanalysis
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