Children’s Dreaming and the Development of ConsciousnessDavid Foulkes is one of the international leaders in the empirical study of children’s dreaming, and a pioneer of sleep laboratory research with children. In this book, which distills a lifetime of study, Foulkes shows that dreaming as we normally understand it—active stories in which the dreamer is an actor—appears relatively late in childhood. This true dreaming begins between the ages of 7 and 9. He argues that this late development of dreaming suggests an equally late development of waking reflective self-awareness. |
Contents
1 | |
1 Challenging the Assumptions | 6 |
2 How to Study Childrens Dreams | 18 |
3 The Two Studies | 40 |
4 Ages Three to Five | 56 |
5 Ages Five to Nine | 74 |
6 Ages Nine to Fifteen | 98 |
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Common terms and phrases
active adults ages 11 ages 13 ages 9 animal autistic awareness behavior Block Design boys brainstem chil child children’s dream reports coherent competence correlates cortical cross-sectional study developmental psychologists dream content dream data dream development dream events dream experience dream imagery dream recall dream research dream-making dreamer dren dren’s earlier early adolescence evidence eye movements findings Foulkes girls happened Hobson Hollifield human ideation imagine infantile infantile amnesia infants interview Jean Piaget Kushida laboratory dream later longitudinal study lucid dreaming memory mental imagery mentation mind narrative night non-REM dreaming non-REM reports non-REM sleep observed older parents person phenomena Piaget preschoolers psychology rate of dream reflect relatively reliable REM awakenings REM dream reporting REM sleep remember reporting dreams sample scores seems self-participation sense simulate reality sleep laboratory social stages Stickgold story suggest tell tests theory tion typical variables visual visual-spatial skills young children younger