Dreaming in Bipolar Disorders – Feasibility of the Central Image Method: A Prospective Controlled Trial
Gabriele Schmid-Mühlbauer, Laura Reggiannini, Peter Treu, Woo Ri Chae, Thomas Stamm

TL;DR
This study shows that the Central Image Method is a reliable way to analyze dreams in people with bipolar disorder and healthy individuals.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the feasibility of using the Central Image Method for analyzing dream emotions in bipolar disorder.
Findings
The Central Image Method showed very good interrater agreement for primary and secondary dream emotions.
Depressed bipolar patients had more negative dream emotions compared to euthymic patients and healthy controls.
Dream emotions may reflect different emotion regulation patterns in bipolar disorder states.
Abstract
Emotions play an important role in the emergence, formation, and experience of dreams. The Central Image (CI) in a dream refers to the dream’s dominant or underlying emotion, and it is the best-remembered part of a dream. Bipolar disorders are characterized by strong emotions, particularly during manic and depressive episodes. In these patients, dreams and CIs may serve as a helpful diagnostic and therapeutic tool. This study aims to evaluate the feasibility of the CI Method and to check for differences concerning dreams and CI emotions between healthy controls and patients with bipolar disorder. Over a period of 3 weeks, 61 participants were asked to maintain a daily record of all dreams remembered. Dream reports were rated using the Central Image Method (CIM) by two independent, blinded raters. We assessed for interrater agreement on the CIM and for within and between group…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and Wakefulness Research · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment · Sleep and related disorders
