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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Montreal
Posts: 16
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Hi, I recently stumbled upon this sleep learning site (Sleep Learning - Learn While You Sleep!) and was wondering if anybody here has used it, not necessarily the cd's on the site but if anyone has actually learned anything by listening to something while they sleep and if it works?? By the way, nice meeting you all and thanks in advance. |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Sydney
Posts: 189
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I've never tried it, but it seems plausible. I often go to bed thinking of a problem and wake up with its solution. As with many areas of sleep research though, the studies are vague at best. The only way to really find out is to give it a try. I'm very keen to hear how things go for you. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Reno/Tahoe, NV, USA
Posts: 375
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It's possible to improve skills through lucid dreaming. Stephen LaBerge did a decent amount of research on it. And if you've read the material at least once, I don't see why you couldn't study by accessing that material in your subconscious while lucid dreaming, either.
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Lincoln, NE
Posts: 111
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I wrote a blog post regarding sleep learning and the integration of lucid dreaming as a tool to achieve this. Run Fat Boy .net » Blog Archive » Hypnopaedia and the missing link OR The Jim Jones Sleep Learning Theory What I was trying to note in my post is that all of the research I have read about sleep learning had to do with the playback of trivial facts while in REM. The emphasis was on rote memorization and the ability of the subjects to regurgitate those facts when awake. Given the appropriate state of consciousness (lucid dreaming), could we be successful in not just the retention of trivialalities, but maybe we can achieve logic deduction and reasoning? This is what I was trying to accomplish in the experiment setup I outline above in my article. |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 6
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Last year, I was memorizing some lines in a Shakespeare play. I tried recording them, and setting my computer to play them back about 2 hours into sleeping for the night, but it honestly didn't help. All it did, though, was wake me up every 90 minutes (at the lightest part of each sleep cycle, I guess). It may work—perhaps with shorter things to learn (like direct translations of words where the recording says a word, and then its translation, and repeats each one over and over again.)
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| | #8 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 22
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I haven't ever heard of sleep learning, but I have heard of the one second nap |
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 26
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At the end of my junior year in high school, my horrible, strict English teacher handed out a review for the final exam: 150 multiple choice questions on everything we'd studied. I procrastinated until it was too late, and the night before the exam, recorded every "example" question on the review and what I thought was the correct answer. I played this cassette in my auto-reversing Walkman overnight (in addition to having already "studied" the exam through the act of recording it) and woke up... a little late. I just missed the bell to my English class and was told I'd have to come back at the end of the day, which happened to be the last day of school--friends leaving, hugs, goodbyes, etc. So pissed was I by the end of the day that I flew through those 150 questions in half an hour. My hand had a mind of its own and ticked off Scantron dots before I could finish reading the questions. I have no doubt that subconsciously I was recognizing the correct answer out of the group from having pressed it into my brain the night prior. Though in this instance it was pretty much a desperate CYA situation rather than a deliberate test, my experience with it causes me to lean toward an acceptance of sleep learning as a viable, reliable method of ingraining information into your subconscious. What I didn't get to experience is how to access that information in a conscious manner. Recognizing memorized multiple choice answers isn't the same as trying to learn philosophy or mathematics if one has never encountered the material before. I'd like to try it again sometime just to see what else I can do. Last edited by jpletting; 11-24-2006 at 02:05 AM. |
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| | #10 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Sydney
Posts: 189
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Toronto
Posts: 201
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I actually believe that I encountered something like this thought I can't honestly say when and where, just that the feeling described in that post is VERY familiar to me. What I find with techniques such as these though, is that sometimes forcefully trying to implement them might turn out what seems to be a "failure". It's like trying to force something and it not happening. It has to occur naturally. Maybe my limiting belief but I think there's some merit to it |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Nov 2006
Posts: 32
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The photoreading system takes advantage of the fact that your subconscious mind sees all and remembers all by having you scan pages literally focused at the center and not on any single word, flipping a page every 2 seconds. Then you use "rapid reading" to sort of pull information out of the book, like zoning in on what you intended to learn from the book. It is most effective if you are reading with a purpose, such as to glean specific information. I've only begun to study the photoreading stuff but if it works It would not seem far off to be able to do the same quick scanning of a book then use lucid dreaming to pull the information from your subconscious. Not exactly learning with audio stuff at night but similar. I just had an insight...I've also just begun reading "Think And Grow Rich" by Napoleon Hill. One of the key concepts in the book is Faith. Not faith such as you have in a religious context but ingraining faith into your subconsious through positive affirmations. Positive because any emotion you assosiate with those affirmations will increase its power in that direction. He said when discussing this topic that the repitition of that information will bring you to 100% belief in yourself and those affirmations. I know those sleep aides like quit smoking in your sleep or lose weight etc work by essentially reading these positive affirmations to your subconsious. The only problem is that while your subconscience can send information to your conscience at times, otherwise known as a hunch, intuition or gut feeling you cannot however pull the information consciously Hope this helps. Cheers, Timothy |
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| | #13 (permalink) | |
| Member Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: STARKE, FLORIDA
Posts: 32
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 241
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I'm not familiar with sleep learning but I wrote a related post on my blog called "do you believe in magic" it explains how you can ask yourself any question you really want to know the answer to just before going to sleep and your subconscious mind will reveal the answer after you wake up. The link to the site is below. John |
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| | #15 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 9
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I seriously doubt sleep learning would really work, but if it did, it might work as depicted on Huxley's Brave New World - you learn bits of information, but you cannot connect it to other useful, contextual information, rendering the process inadequate for serious learning.
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| | #16 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 1
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sleep seems fulfilled in dreams; i posit that dreams are the means by which save both past and projected knowledge (predictions). It may be that the stimuli information received in dreams is simply too complex to recall with our limited faculties; but the information is stored nonetheless. Learning is fulfilled through application, which can only be enacted through some period of recall. Memory is best encoded with the most vivid detail: what is more exciting than our dreams? |
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