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Why Some Dreams Feel Real and Others Feel So Strange

Science finally explains why some dreams feel completely real while others are bizarre. New research links vivid dreaming to deeper, more restful sleep.

A person stands in an open wheat field at twilight, looking upward into a sweeping sky — a quiet image of the mind reaching beyond the familiar, much like the dreaming brain does every night. The boundary between what is real and what is imagined has fascinated scientists and dreamers alike. Photo: Unsplash / NavsoraTimes / Editorial
Fig. 1 — A lone figure contemplates the sky at dusk
A person stands in an open wheat field at twilight, looking upward into a sweeping sky — a quiet image of the mind reaching beyond the familiar, much like the dreaming brain does every night. The boundary between what is real and what is imagined has fascinated scientists and dreamers alike. Photo: Unsplash / NavsoraTimes / Editorial

In This Article

  1. The Science Behind the Dream World Your Brain Creates
  2. What Actually Happens in Your Brain While You Dream
  3. Why Do Some Dreams Feel So Vivid and Real?
  4. Vivid Dreams and Sleep Quality — A Surprising Connection
  5. What This Means for You and Your Sleep

You wake up in a cold sweat. You were running from something — or maybe you were flying. For a few seconds, you can't tell what's real. Then it all fades. But last night felt different. Last night, you had a dream so ordinary, so completely normal, that when you woke up you spent a full minute wondering if it actually happened. Same sleeping brain. Completely different experience. Why? Scientists have been puzzling over this for decades, and the answers are finally getting interesting.

The Science Behind the Dream World Your Brain Creates

Dreams have always been a mystery — even to neuroscientists. We know they happen mostly during REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep, the stage where your brain is surprisingly active. But "mostly" is doing a lot of work in that sentence. Dreams also happen during lighter sleep stages, and we're still figuring out exactly why.

Here's what we do know: your brain doesn't just hit "pause" when you fall asleep. It keeps running, processing emotions, replaying memories, and — this is the strange part — actively rebuilding your sense of reality. New research from the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca found that the brain doesn't simply replay the day's events. It reshapes them — blending real memories with imagined or anticipated events to create entirely new scenarios, some logical and some utterly surreal.

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What Is REM Sleep? REM stands for Rapid Eye Movement — a stage of sleep where your eyes move quickly behind closed lids, your brain is nearly as active as when you're awake, and most vivid dreaming happens. Adults typically cycle through REM four to six times a night, with longer REM periods toward morning.

What Actually Happens in Your Brain While You Dream

Think of your sleeping brain like a film studio with most of the producers out of the room. The visual cortex — the part that processes images — lights up and starts generating scenes. The amygdala and hippocampus, which handle emotions and memory, become highly active. That's why dreams feel emotionally charged and pull from real experiences, fears, and half-forgotten moments from years ago.

But the prefrontal cortex — the part responsible for logical thinking and critical reasoning — largely switches off. This is why you don't question the absurdity mid-dream. Of course you can fly. Of course your old school has transformed into a cave. It all makes perfect sense while you're in it. The moment the prefrontal cortex comes back online upon waking, the whole thing collapses.

287
participants tracked in IMT Lucca dream study
3,700+
dream and waking reports analysed by researchers
2 weeks
participants kept daily dream and experience records

Why Do Some Dreams Feel So Vivid and Real?

This is the question everyone actually wants answered. And research published in 2026 in Communications Biology offers a compelling explanation. A subset of dreams — sometimes called "epic dreams" — are so immersive and realistic that they can be genuinely indistinguishable from real life. People recall them with the same confidence as actual memories. According to the researchers, this happens when the brain's normal "gating" system during REM sleep breaks down slightly. Instead of keeping dream content clearly labelled as simulation, the brain accidentally tags it as real autobiographical memory. The hippocampus — your brain's memory filing system — gets confused. And when that happens, the dream doesn't just feel real. It becomes real, in your mind's filing cabinet.

On the other hand, strange, fragmented dreams — where you're half-aware something is off but can't quite place it — tend to happen during lighter sleep stages. Your brain is generating content without fully committing to it. The result is the mental equivalent of a bad phone connection: some bits come through, other bits are garbled noise.

"The quality of the experience, especially how immersive it is, appears to be crucial."

— Giulio Bernardi, IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca · PLOS Biology, 2026

Vivid Dreams and Sleep Quality — A Surprising Connection

Here's something nobody expected. A study published in PLOS Biology in March 2026 analysed 196 overnight recordings from 44 healthy adults and found that vivid, immersive dreaming actually makes your sleep feel deeper — even when brain activity during those dreams looks more like wakefulness on an EEG machine. That's the paradox. REM sleep, during which most vivid dreams happen, produces brain waves similar to being awake. Yet people consistently report it as a period of deep, restful sleep.

The researchers found the reverse is also true. The worst-rated sleep experiences weren't dreamless — they were the half-awake, fragmented stretches where people felt vaguely aware but weren't actually dreaming anything coherent. In India, where sleep quality is a growing concern — surveys suggest a large portion of urban adults regularly wake up feeling unrested — this finding matters. It suggests that the problem may not always be how long you sleep, but what kind of mental experience you have while sleeping.

44
healthy adults in PLOS Biology sleep study
196
overnight EEG recordings analysed
4
nights each participant slept in the laboratory
The Unexpected Finding Participants who had vivid, immersive dreams rated their sleep as deep and restful — even when their brain waves showed activity more typical of wakefulness. Those who had fragmented, half-aware experiences without clear dreams consistently rated their sleep as shallow, regardless of how long they slept.

What This Means for You and Your Sleep

Researchers are careful to say this is still early work. We can't yet engineer vivid dreams on demand, and not all vivid dreams are created equal — nightmares are vivid too, and they certainly don't leave you feeling rested. The open question is: what specifically makes a dream immersive in the restorative sense, versus distressing? That's something sleep scientists are actively working to understand.

What this research does change is how we think about dreaming overall. For a long time, dreams were treated as a side effect — something that just happened while your body did the real work of repair and restoration. The emerging picture is more interesting than that. Dreams may be doing work themselves, helping the brain create a sustained sense of being disconnected from the outside world — which is, it turns out, part of what makes sleep feel like sleep.

  • Vivid dreams serve a purpose — Immersive dreaming is not random noise; it may actively contribute to how rested and restored you feel after a night's sleep.
  • Strange dreams have a simple cause — The prefrontal cortex (your logic centre) dials down during sleep, which is why bizarre dream scenarios feel completely normal while you're in them.
  • Fragmented awareness is the real sleep disruptor — Feeling vaguely awake and aware without actually dreaming is associated with worse sleep quality than either deep dreamless sleep or fully vivid dreaming.

"Dreams may help shape how we experience sleep by immersing us in an internal world that keeps us disconnected from the external environment." — Bernardi et al., PLOS Biology, 2026.


📄 Source & Citation

Primary Source: Michalak A, Marzoli D, Pietrogiacomi F, et al. (2026). Immersive NREM2 dreaming preserves subjective sleep depth against declining sleep pressure. PLOS Biology. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3003683

Secondary Source: MÖBIUS model of epic dreaming. Communications Biology, March 2026. https://www.nature.com/articles/s42003-026-09781-x

Authors & Affiliations: Adriana Michalak, Giulio Bernardi et al. (IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca, Italy); ERC-funded Sleep & Brain Laboratory

Data & Code: EEG recordings and participant data available via the journal's online supplementary portal at PLOS Biology.

Key Themes: REM Sleep · Dream Neuroscience · Sleep Quality · Vivid Dreaming · Cognitive Neuroscience

Supporting References:

[1] Demirel Ç et al. (2025). EEG correlates of lucid dreaming: alpha wave connectivity in posterior regions. Journal of Neuroscience, April 2025.

[2] Wamsley EJ & Stickgold R. (2024). New strategies for the cognitive science of dreaming. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 28(12):1105–1117.

[3] ScienceDaily. (April 28, 2026). Your dreams aren't random. Here's what's really happening. IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca / Communications Psychology.

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