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Main Authors: Leckie, Luke, Bershad, Anya K., Heppler, Jes, McClay, Mason, Rappe, Sofiia, Foster, Jacob G.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14279
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author Leckie, Luke
Bershad, Anya K.
Heppler, Jes
McClay, Mason
Rappe, Sofiia
Foster, Jacob G.
author_facet Leckie, Luke
Bershad, Anya K.
Heppler, Jes
McClay, Mason
Rappe, Sofiia
Foster, Jacob G.
contents Dreams offer a unique window into the cognitive and affective dynamics of the sleeping and the waking mind. Recent quantitative linguistic approaches have shown promise in obtaining corpus-level measures of dream sentiment and topic occurrence. However, it is currently unclear how the affective content of individual dreams relates to their semantic content and structure. Here, we combine word embedding, topic modeling, and network analysis to investigate this relationship. By applying Discourse Atom Topic Modeling (DATM) to the DreamBank corpus of >18K dream reports, we represent the latent themes arising within dream reports as a sparse dictionary of topics and identify the affective associations of those topics. We show that variation in dream report affect (valence and arousal) is associated with changes in topical content. By representing each dream report as a network of topics, we demonstrate that the affective content of dream narratives is also coupled to semantic structure. Positively valenced dream reports exhibit more coherent, structured, and linear narratives, whilst negatively valenced dreams have more narrative loops and dominant topics. Topic networks of high arousal dream reports are structurally dominated by few high arousal topics and incoherent topical connections, whereas low arousal dream reports contain more loops. These findings suggest that affective processes are associated with both the content and structure of dreams. Our approach showcases the potential of integrating natural language processing and network analysis with psychology to elucidate the interplay of affect, cognition and narrative in dreams. This methodology has broad applications for the study of narrated experience and psychiatric symptomatology.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_14279
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The content and structure of dreams are coupled to affect
Leckie, Luke
Bershad, Anya K.
Heppler, Jes
McClay, Mason
Rappe, Sofiia
Foster, Jacob G.
Neurons and Cognition
Dreams offer a unique window into the cognitive and affective dynamics of the sleeping and the waking mind. Recent quantitative linguistic approaches have shown promise in obtaining corpus-level measures of dream sentiment and topic occurrence. However, it is currently unclear how the affective content of individual dreams relates to their semantic content and structure. Here, we combine word embedding, topic modeling, and network analysis to investigate this relationship. By applying Discourse Atom Topic Modeling (DATM) to the DreamBank corpus of >18K dream reports, we represent the latent themes arising within dream reports as a sparse dictionary of topics and identify the affective associations of those topics. We show that variation in dream report affect (valence and arousal) is associated with changes in topical content. By representing each dream report as a network of topics, we demonstrate that the affective content of dream narratives is also coupled to semantic structure. Positively valenced dream reports exhibit more coherent, structured, and linear narratives, whilst negatively valenced dreams have more narrative loops and dominant topics. Topic networks of high arousal dream reports are structurally dominated by few high arousal topics and incoherent topical connections, whereas low arousal dream reports contain more loops. These findings suggest that affective processes are associated with both the content and structure of dreams. Our approach showcases the potential of integrating natural language processing and network analysis with psychology to elucidate the interplay of affect, cognition and narrative in dreams. This methodology has broad applications for the study of narrated experience and psychiatric symptomatology.
title The content and structure of dreams are coupled to affect
topic Neurons and Cognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14279