Prof. YU Kai Ching, CalvinCalvinProf. YU Kai ChingDr. THOMPSON Nigel2017-11-242017-11-242016Sleep and Hypnosis, 2016. Vol. 18(1), p. 8-18.1302-1192http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11861/4769Open accessThis study aims to provide a preliminary overview of how specific sleep problems might have differential impacts on the phenomenological properties of dreaming. The sample contained 186 upper secondary school students, whose subjective intensity of dream experiences, thematic dream content, and sleep disturbances were assessed using the Dream Intensity Scale, Dream Motif Scale, and Sleep Habits Questionnaire, respectively. The overall evidence suggests that most sleep problems, except sleep bruxism, sleepwalking, and snoring, can amplify various aspects of dreaming, with the effects of sleep paralysis being the most robust and extensive. Although both sleep onset insomnia and hypersomnia may increase the overall intensity of dreaming, the elevated dream intensity in sleep onset insomnia is primarily reflected by stronger dream distortion and paramnesia whereas that in hypersomnia is more contributed by vivid perceptual sensations during dreaming.enDream ThemesDream IntensityNarcolepsySleep DisordersSleep DisturbancesSleep problems and the phenomenological factors of dreamingPeer Reviewed Journal Article