The first one is “which fulfillment”. In 1900 Sigmund Freud puts forward this hypothesis in a text titled “The Interpretation of Dreams”. According to Freud, wish fulfillment appears while we do not have …show more content…
This theory belongs to Sigmund Freud as well. Random neural impulses can disclose wishes or strong emotions we do not realize we had. Also, there is one more very popular school of thought holds that dreams are just some kind of brain fart. In other words, it is an accidental side-effect of activity in brain stem. This stem can give random signals which can be resulting in dreams.
The third hypothesis is “. Encoding short-term memories into long-term storage”. One popular Chinese psychologist, Jie Zhang, explores this idea in this way. Our brain is always storing a lot of memories, and it does not matter we are awake or asleep. Nonetheless, any dreams are placed in “temporary storage” of daily life consequences. This spot our brain use to hold memories before it will move them from “short-term” memory to “long-term”. That is why, they might be as flash in our minds as dreams before we remove them far away in our memory