A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Dream Sharing and the Enhancement of Empathy: Theoretical and Applied Implications




AuthorsBlagrove M, Lockheart J, Carr M, Basra S, Graham H, Lewis H, Murphy E, Sakalauskaite A, Trotman C, Valli K

PublisherEDUCATIONAL PUBLISHING FOUNDATION-AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC

Publishing placeWashington

Publication year2021

JournalDreaming

Journal name in sourceDREAMING

Journal acronymDREAMING

Volume31

Issue2

First page 128

Last page139

Number of pages12

ISSN1053-0797

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1037/drm0000165

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa56640/Download/56640__19847__911620aa895d46e281a3cbc749b17315.pdf


Abstract
This study replicated and extended a previous finding that the discussion of dreams increases the level of empathy toward the dreamer from those with whom the dream is discussed. The study addressed mediating variables for the empathy effect. Participants who already knew each other were recruited in dyads and were assigned dream-sharer and discusser roles. Each dyad used the Ullman dream appreciation technique to explore the relationship of the sharer's dreams to recent experiences in the sharer's life, with a maximum of 4 dream discussions per dyad (mean length of dreams = 140.15 words, mean discussion length = 23.72 min). The empathy of each member of a dyad toward the other was assessed using a 12-item state empathy questionnaire. A total of 44 participants (females = 26, males = 18, M-age = 26.70) provided empathy scores at baseline and after each dream discussion. For below median baseline empathy scorers, empathy of discussers toward their dream-sharer increased significantly as a result of the dream discussions, with medium effect size, eta(2) = .39. Dream-sharers had a nonsignificant increase in empathy toward their discusser. Change in empathy was not linear across successive discussions, and was not related to length of dream reports, nor length of discussions. These findings of postsleep, social effects of dreaming, with possibly a group bonding function, go beyond theories of dreaming that have a within-sleep emotional or memory processing function for the individual.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:05