Dreaming or daydreaming during COVID-19 lockdown: A comparison between maladaptive and nonmaladaptive daydreamers.

IF 1.4 Q4 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL
G. Margherita, Alessia Caffieri, R. Mariani, Maria Filosa, Tommaso Manari, V. Lenzo, M. Quattropani, E. Vegni, L. Borghi, G. Castelnuovo, E. Saita, M. Freda, Giorgia Varallo, C. Franceschini, A. Musetti
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Starting from the idea that dreaming could be considered an index of the psychological health of individuals regarding the COVID-19 outbreak, a major risk of psychological maladjustment has been registered for maladaptive daydreamers (MDers;i.e., people with a compulsive fantasy activity associated with distress and psychological impairment). Nevertheless, there is a gap in literature about dreaming in MDers in general and particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. The aim of this study was to investigate differences in dreaming and dream content between probable MDers and non-MDers during the COVID-19 lockdown in Italy. A total of 3,857 Italian adults (664 probable MDers), completed the Maladaptive Daydreaming Scale (MDS-16) and the Mannheim Dream Questionnaire (MADRE). Among them, 1,095 participants (222 probable MDers) decided to recount their dreams, subsequently analysed through a cluster analysis performed by T-LAB software. Significantly higher levels of dream recall, emotional intensity of dreams, nightmare frequency, nightmare distress, recurring nightmares about daytime, lucid dreams, interest toward dreams, problem solving and creative dreams, and dreams affecting daytime mood emerged in probable MDers compared to non-MDers. No differences were observed in the emotional tone of dreams. From the quali-quantitative analysis of dream narratives, similar themes emerged in probable MDers and non-MDers, except for a cluster named Dreaming the loss of others, where the non-MDers variable is highly represented. Our results highlight some significant differences between probable MDers and non-MDers with respect to dreaming activity. The massive use of dream activity as an affective regulator emerges for both probable MDers and non-MDers during lockdown. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved)
在COVID-19封锁期间做梦或白日梦:适应不良和非适应不良白日梦者的比较。
从做梦可以被认为是COVID-19爆发时个人心理健康状况的一个指标这一观点出发,适应不良的白日梦者(mder)存在心理适应不良的主要风险。(即伴有痛苦和心理障碍的强迫性幻想活动的人)。然而,关于mder做梦的文献普遍存在空白,特别是在COVID-19大流行期间。这项研究的目的是调查在意大利COVID-19封锁期间,可能的老年痴呆症患者和非老年痴呆症患者在做梦和梦内容方面的差异。共有3,857名意大利成年人(664名可能是mder)完成了不适应白日梦量表(MDS-16)和曼海姆梦问卷(MADRE)。其中,1095名参与者(222名可能的mder)决定讲述他们的梦,随后通过T-LAB软件进行聚类分析。与非重度睡眠障碍患者相比,重度睡眠障碍患者的梦境回忆水平、梦境的情绪强度、噩梦频率、噩梦痛苦、白天反复出现的噩梦、清醒梦、对梦的兴趣、解决问题的能力和创造性的梦,以及影响白天情绪的梦都明显更高。在梦境的情绪基调上没有观察到差异。从梦境叙事的定性定量分析来看,相似的主题出现在可能的mder和非mder中,除了一个名为“梦见失去他人”的集群,其中非mder变量具有很高的代表性。我们的研究结果强调了可能的多梦症患者和非多梦症患者在做梦活动方面的一些显著差异。在封锁期间,大量使用梦境活动作为情感调节器出现在可能的重度痴呆和非重度痴呆中。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2022 APA,版权所有)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
10.00%
发文量
45
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