4.3 Article

Picture representation during REM dreams: A redox molecular hypothesis

Journal

BIOSYSTEMS
Volume 100, Issue 2, Pages 79-86

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biosystems.2010.01.005

Keywords

REM dream pictures; Visual imagery; Bioluminescent photons; Radicals as signals; Retinotopically organized visual areas; Mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase-rich areas

Funding

  1. BioLabor (Hungary)

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A novel molecular hypothesis about visual perception and imagery has recently been proposed (Bokkon, 2009; BioSystems). Namely, external electromagnetic visible photons are converted into electrical signals in the retina and are then conveyed to VI. Next, these retinotopic electrical signals (spike-related electrical signals along classical axonal-dendritic pathways) can be converted into synchronized bioluminescent biophoton signals (inside the neurons) by neurocellular radical reactions (redox processes) in retinotopically organized V1 mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase-rich visual areas. The bioluminescent photonic signals (inside the neurons) generated by neurocellular redox/radical reactions in synchronized V1 neurons make it possible to produce computational biophysical pictures during visual perception and imagery. Our hypothesis is in line with the functional roles of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in living cells and states that this is not a random process, but rather a strict mechanism used in signaling pathways. Here, we suggest that intrinsic biophysical pictures can also emerge during REM dreams. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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