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British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.) logoLink to British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.)
. 1983 Dec 24;287(6409):1916–1919. doi: 10.1136/bmj.287.6409.1916

Dreaming during scientific papers: effects of added extrinsic material.

R F Harvey, M B Schullinger, A Stassinopoulos, E Winkle
PMCID: PMC1550176  PMID: 6197133

Abstract

During a series of presentations of scientific papers 40.6% of 276 subjects reported dreaming, but only 18.1% actually fell asleep. The frequency of dreaming was significantly increased by the addition of either "very boring" or "very interesting" slides to the usual ones, but not by "neutral" slides. The recall of lecture content and the proportion of audience asleep were (surprisingly) not greatly affected by the addition of extraneous slides of any sort. On the other hand, adding "very interesting" slides greatly increases audience enjoyment.

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