'Sleep Language' Could Enable Communication During Lucid Dreams (arstechnica.com) 46
Researchers have developed a "language" called Remmyo, which relies on specific facial muscle movements that can occur during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. People who are capable of lucid dreaming can learn this language during their waking hours and potentially communicate while they are asleep. Ars Technica reports: "You can transfer all important information from lucid dreams using no more than three letters in a word," [sleep expert Michael Raduga], who founded Phase Research Center in 2007 to study sleep, told Ars. "This level of optimization took a lot of time and intellectual resources." Remmyo consists of six sets of facial movements that can be detected by electromyography (EMG) sensors on the face. Slight electrical impulses that reach facial muscles make them capable of movement during sleep paralysis, and these are picked up by sensors and transferred to software that can type, vocalize, and translate Remmyo. Translation depends on which Remmyo letters are used by the sleeper and picked up by the software, which already has information from multiple dictionaries stored in its virtual brain. It can translate Remmyo into another language as it is being "spoken" by the sleeper. "We can digitally vocalize Remmyo or its translation in real time, which helps us to hear speech from lucid dreams," Raduga said.
For his initial experiment, Raduga used the sleep laboratory of the Neurological Clinic of Frankfurt University in Germany. His subjects had already learned Remmyo and were also trained to enter a state of lucid dreaming and signal that they were in that lucid state during REM sleep. While they were immersed in lucid dreams, EMG sensors on their faces sent information from electrical impulses to the translation software. The results were uncertain. Based on attempts to translate planned phrases, Remmyo turned out to be anywhere from 13 to 81 percent effective, and in the interview, Raduga said he faced skepticism about the effectiveness of the translation software during the peer review process of his study, which is now published in the journal Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research and Practice. He still looks forward to making results more consistent by leveling up translation methods in the future. "The main problem is that it is hard to use only one muscle on your face to say something in Remmyo," said Raduga. "Unintentionally, people strain more than one muscle, and EMG sensors detect it all. Now we use only handwritten algorithms to overcome the problem, but we're going to use machine learning and AI to improve Remmyo decoding."
For his initial experiment, Raduga used the sleep laboratory of the Neurological Clinic of Frankfurt University in Germany. His subjects had already learned Remmyo and were also trained to enter a state of lucid dreaming and signal that they were in that lucid state during REM sleep. While they were immersed in lucid dreams, EMG sensors on their faces sent information from electrical impulses to the translation software. The results were uncertain. Based on attempts to translate planned phrases, Remmyo turned out to be anywhere from 13 to 81 percent effective, and in the interview, Raduga said he faced skepticism about the effectiveness of the translation software during the peer review process of his study, which is now published in the journal Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research and Practice. He still looks forward to making results more consistent by leveling up translation methods in the future. "The main problem is that it is hard to use only one muscle on your face to say something in Remmyo," said Raduga. "Unintentionally, people strain more than one muscle, and EMG sensors detect it all. Now we use only handwritten algorithms to overcome the problem, but we're going to use machine learning and AI to improve Remmyo decoding."
Interesting idea, poor article (Score:2)
From the article:
Translation depends on which Remmyo letters are used by the sleeper and picked up by the software, which already has information from multiple dictionaries stored in its virtual brain.
Virtual Brain??? WTF are they talking about â" is this the 1970s or something?
The idea is interesting but there is no detail either in the linked article or the abstract or the paywalled journal article to tell us what this language is, or now one communicates using inky three letters.
Re: Interesting idea, poor article (Score:2)
I meant only three letters. I miss the preview feature and working quotation marks from the old Slashdot.
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WTF kind of nonsense is this?
You respond to every article, I have no idea who you are trying to slander (not that I particularly care), but it is pathetic.
If you're a kid, do something productive with your time like learn Python or something. If you're an adult ... well I'm sorry.
Sleep language? Facial movements? That must be the language that cereminier guy uses in the videos he publishes because I can't understand a word of what he is saying and I can't interpret his toothless facial movements :(
The only thing I figured out so far is that Adam Sarwood somehow got canceled. I wonder who that Adam Sarwood guy is! Does anybody know here? I googled it and couldn't find anything...
Re: Interesting idea, poor article (Score:5, Funny)
I miss the preview feature and working quotation marks from the old Slashdot.
Easy 4 step solution:
1. Take you iPhone(tm) into your right hand
2. Move your right hand backwards behind your shoulder
3. quickly move your hand forward
4. when your arm moves the quickest, release iPhone(tm)
Bonus points for doing this when standing on a balcony, or facing a pond, or a wall
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I can confirm this does resolve the issue with little to no negative impact. In fact performance may increase after applying this change.
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Seems to me they made a nice random generator.
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So the face makes random expressions and from that letters are derived and those are translated and are 13 to 81 percent effective.
Seems to me they made a nice random generator.
And I was hoping for a Remmyo++ release by next year, that would allow me to create objects within dreams, execute events within them, and have them return serialized data from the in-dream environment.
More like bullshit looking for funding... (Score:3)
By slapping AI on their garage obsession.
"The main problem is that it is hard to use only one muscle on your face to say something in Remmyo," said Raduga.
"Unintentionally, people strain more than one muscle, and EMG sensors detect it all. Now we use only handwritten algorithms to overcome the problem, but we're going to use machine learning and AI to improve Remmyo decoding."
Did I say garage? I meant garbage.
The results were uncertain.
Based on attempts to translate planned phrases, Remmyo turned out to be anywhere from 13 to 81 percent effective, and in the interview, Raduga said he faced skepticism about the effectiveness of the translation software during the peer review process of his study
That's not uncertain. That's random. As in noise.
As in if you're claiming any certainty to "effectiveness" between "13 to 81 percent" - you are a Texas sharpshooter [wikipedia.org] and thus a snake oil salesman.
Besides, who will finance junk with such poor marketing. Remmyo? Should have went with AI upfront.
Call it DreAIm or LucAId.
Or ChatGPT-4-Sleepity. [youtube.com]
Five. Sorry... FaiV.
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Perhaps you should engage your brain a little bit.
For some people the correctness is as low as 13%
For others it is up to 81% - which is not bad at all.
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Does Remmyo have the correct pronouns?
We wouldn't want to offend anybody when we're on social media in our sleep.
Go back to sleep Grandpa.
The joke was about how we'll be able to be on social media in our sleep.
I guess that part went whoosh among all the mouth-frothing caused by the trigger-word though. Maybe it's you who needs an adjustment.
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This is a fair question. It accurately reflects the level of reasonable demonstrated by those who advertise pronoun preferences.
One suggestion to improve the software... (Score:2)
On suggestion to improve the software could be to equip the software's virtual brain with frikin sharks with lasers attached on their heads and let the AI and Machine Learning algorithms aim them at the facial muscles that are not supposed to twitch in the first place.
Re: One suggestion to improve the software... (Score:2)
Even sharks have to be equipped with AI these days. As if lasers arenâ(TM)t sufficient.
Sleeper controlling muscles? (Score:1)
How in the world does a person in deep sleep control his mind to communicate through his face muscles. UNless they mean that the muscles move automaticall as per the dreams - then that is plausible. But sleeper willingly communicating - seems weird.
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How in the world does a person in deep sleep control his mind to communicate through his face muscles. UNless they mean that the muscles move automaticall as per the dreams - then that is plausible. But sleeper willingly communicating - seems weird.
No idea but it sounds like somebody needs to tell them about chorded keyboards.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
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It seems incredibly stupid - people already talk in their sleep.
If a lucid dreamer can be taught to twitch their face using a specialised language, why not just teach them to talk from their dreams?
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That's what this is doing. But talking in your sleep is not deep enough. We're talking twitching dog here. Your central nervous system paralyses you when you enter REM sleep. the brain is still sending the signals, but only the tiniest echo gets through. Lucid dreaming, you train yourself to be able to control the dream, and also aspects of the dream. Visualising your "home base" is a key fundamental, for example. So, when you visualise leaving your home base, putting on your communication mask and keying t
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When one has a lucid dream the dreamer is aware they are asleep and dreaming. Body awareness is usually part of it along with varying degrees of body paralysis.
My philosophy of being skeptical of consensus has determined that everybody is usually right but I've also found exceptions and lucid dreaming is one of them. First you need to remember dreams which is challenging for me because I'm a very deep sleeper. A dream journal and interrupted sleep help. Logging whatever you remember from dreams each morning
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The environment is dreamlike... ephemeral and so is awareness. Concentration was possible but more likely to rouse me until what began as a dream shifted to a daydream where I knew everything that was going to happen. It's possible it gets better with practice and consistency but I never really reached a point where I could lucid dream simply by wanting to. More like nightly affirmations "I'm going to become aware and alert in my sleep." with a half dozen successes across a year or so. Most of the successes
Lucid Dreaming is BORING!!! (Score:1)
I've had lucid dreams, and every time I am bored senseless after the first 5 minutes. "You can do anything you want!" Yeah, but YOU are doing it:
You're not actually flying, you're creating a fake world below you. You can fly through an obstacle course but you have to MAKE the obstacle course.
You're not getting busy with a model, you're pretending there's a model, and you know it.
Anything else you want to do? I decided to work on some programming, but since you can't test/compile anything and you don't have
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On the few occasions I've spontaneously had a lucid dream, it was fun. But I don't think I'd want to do it all the time. It's like those movies where you get to choose what happens next, which I've never been interested in. Just show me the damned movie. Likewise, just show me the damned dream. I'm supposed to be resting, not making an effort.
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Good question. While I do feel some sense of agency in my normal dreams, it's usually severely constrained, so I'm mostly limited to being a passive observer with emotional reactions.
Also, I can't think of any dreams I've had in which I'm anyone other than myself. My life circumstances may be different, but I'm pretty sure I'm always myself.
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Well, I've had some very interesting and informative dreams. My stringiest one was I had this ball, see, and it looked a bit like a volleyball, Wilson, but it was hard and smooth and dully lustrous. If I turned it this way, it would make everybody line up in alphabetical order, but if I turned it that way, they would organise themselves by height. And I saw words and figures and bits of code sort beaming out from the ball like smoke and telling people how to arrange themselves in the order we needed. And I
Oh great... (Score:2)
Communication while asleep? How long before this translates to "ads while sleeping"?
Nah (Score:2)
It would be advisable ... (Score:2)
yawn (Score:1)