Dreaming during confinement

What impact has confinement had on our lives? What did we dream about? What metaphors did the dream use to represent this unprecedented, borderless, threatening and anxiety-provoking situation? What do these dreams tell us about the feelings of French people during this period, about the issues of our time?
This book, published by EDP Sciences, proposes to answer these questions based on the results of the online survey "Confinement, Sommeil et Rêves" (Containment, Sleep and Dreams) launched on 6 April 2020 throughout France. The analysis of more than 3,000 responses allows us to estimate the quantitative and qualitative impact that the health crisis and the confinement have had on our lives, our dreams and our souls.
The survey highlighted many changes in lifestyles (e.g. sleep, exercise, sex, smoking, alcohol). In terms of dreams, they were more negative than usual or, on the contrary, more positive. The dream metaphors revealed common feelings and aspirations across France (e.g. anxiety, powerlessness, submission).
Indignation, anger, and injustice are present in all these intimate testimonies, as well as the will to resist and the aspiration for better days, greener, freer, more collective, more together.
Its author,
Perrine Ruby is researcher at the CRNL PAM team
Orders and information :
clicYou can find interviews with Madame Ruby about the publication of this book below:
CRNL
Les animaux parlent, sachons les écouter
Discovering marine soundscapes
La Symphonie neuronale, trois notes pour un cerveau
The project "Trois notes pour un cerveau" directed by Pauline Hercule and Pierre Germain - Compagnie Germ36, inspired by the book La Symphonie neuronale, which has just been published by Humensciences, (Emmanuel Bigand and Barbara Tillmann) won the Célest1 prize, in the Models section.

This competition, open for the 2nd year, is organised by the Théâtre des Célestins de Lyon in partnership with the Théâtre de la Croix-Rousse.
It was set up to identify dramatic artists and introduce them to the public and is open to theatre companies from the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region.
Two categories of selection are proposed :
- The presentation of a model, prefiguration of a show in progress, in improved rehearsal conditions.
- The performance of a show that has already been created ("Large Format")
The presentations take place in the Célestins room.
What is the purpose of music? You might be tempted to answer that it is a pleasant pastime or an art, but nothing really essential.
For the first time, a book demonstrates the opposite. Music is a biological necessity for human beings: it helps to build our brain and has probably played a decisive role in the survival of the species.
By recounting the major scientific discoveries of the last twenty years, the authors explain how music connects, even before birth, our cognitive intelligence with our emotional intelligence, creating a "neural symphony" with multiple benefits for education and health throughout life. Music contributes to a child's development, fosters sociability and is an excellent educational support. It combats cognitive ageing and helps to cure brain diseases.
Enjoy the power of music too!
Emmanuel Bigand was an orchestral musician and is now a professor of cognitive psychology, member of the Institut universitaire de France attached to the CNRS laboratory of learning and development in Dijon. He specialises in the study of the cognitive processes involved in the perception of music.
Barbara Tillmann is director of research at the CNRS at the Lyon Neuroscience Research Centre. Her work has helped to reveal the beneficial role of music in the treatment of certain cognitive disorders. She has been awarded the CNRS silver medal 2016.
All the information here :
https://ciegerm36.wixsite.com/germ36/troisnoteshttps://www.theatredescelestins.com/prix-celest1/https://insb.cnrs.fr/fr/la-symphonie-neuronale
The singing brain - Anna Fiveash - CRNL CAP
Welcome to Singing Brain, a new OPEN series on neuroscience and music. We've known for a long time that music has a positive impact on certain parts of our brain. In this series we will explore these effects by looking at the latest research and interviewing experts in the field. The aim is to inform, entertain and inspire viewers through short video segments about our singing brains.
Interview with Anna Fiveash by Syra Mehdi
Episode 6 looks at rhythm, speech and how music can affect them. Anna Fiveash is a cognitive psychologist who is interested in the various connections between music and language, and how we can use these connections to discover the underlying cognitive processes in the brain. She enlightened me on the various ways music can affect the brain, the positive effects it can have, and how it relates to language.
Watch this episode of Singing Brain to find out more: clic here
better understand the crying of newborns

Is a newborn baby able to modulate its crying to mean that it is in pain? Is our brain capable of decoding the pain signals contained in its crying? These are questions that a multidisciplinary team of doctors, acousticians and neuroscientists is trying to answer.
It is often the anguish of young parents confronted with the crying of their newborn baby. But why is it crying like that? Is he in pain, hungry, sleepy? But it is also the concern of midwives and paediatricians who, at the hospital, try to distinguish a simple stress from a real pain. How to decipher the infant's crying to best meet his needs? This is the subject of a study carried out by a multidisciplinary team from the Faculty of Medicine of Lyon-Saint-Etienne [Nicolas Mathevon and David Reby, ecology and sensory neuroethology team (NeuroPsi, CNPS), Roland Peyron and Camille Fauchon, central pain integration team (NeuroPain, CRNL), Hugues Patural (neonatal department, Saint-Etienne University Hospital). . with the support of the Apicil-Agir contre la douleur foundation. Composed of doctors, researchers and acousticians, it is interested in the perception of painful infant crying in adults........
continued from the article Cortex Mag here
https://celya.universite-lyon.fr/events-/interviews-books-press-articles-206651.kjsp?RH=1524471264098