On social media, researchers claimed that they have unlocked ‘new dimensions’ after two people ‘chat’ in a dream for the first time ever.
A groundbreaking discovery in dream technology has been made by a San Francisco-based company.
Researchers have successfully enabled two people to communicate while lucid dreaming.
This breakthrough could revolutionize how we understand and interact with dreams.
The first-ever communication between dreamers
REMspace, a neurotech company, achieved an unprecedented feat by inducing lucid dreams in two separate individuals and facilitating communication between them.
The experiment involved generating a random word, known only to the company and the recipient, which was played through earbuds.
One subject responded to the word, and the response was stored on a server. Later, the second individual entered their lucid dream state, and the pre-recorded response was transmitted to them.
Additionally, the second subject repeated the message after waking up, completing the first-ever “chat” between dreamers.
The future of dream technology
Michael Raduga, CEO of REMspace, hailed the experiment as a revolutionary step forward in dream technology.
He announced on X (formerly Twitter) that they accomplished this feat twice, calling it the ‘first-ever communication in dreams.'”
He described the achievement as a glimpse into a future where dream communication is commonplace.
While, Raduga believes that lucid dreaming and related phenomena, like REM sleep, could become the next big industry, following AI.
He predicts that in the near future, communicating in dreams will be as ubiquitous as modern technologies we use today.
What this breakthrough could mean for the future
While the experiment was not a direct conversation in the traditional sense, it opens up vast possibilities.
According to Raduga, this advancement could reshape how we think about communication and interaction.
It may impact not just dreams, but potentially real life as well.
The research could lead to a variety of commercial applications, fundamentally altering the way we connect and communicate.
Raduga declared in a press release after the event: “Yesterday, communicating dreams seemed like science fiction. Tomorrow, it will be so common we won’t be able to imagine our lives without this technology.”
He continued on to claim that “we believe that REM sleep and related phenomena, like lucid dreams, will become the next big industry after AI.”
Raduga’s bold vision for the future goes beyond just dream communication.
He is an ambitious individual who once installed an implant in his own brain to control his dreams.
This audacity places him in the same conversation as other tech innovators like Elon Musk and Neuralink.
This research marks a major step in unlocking the potential of lucid dreaming and its real-world applications.
As technology continues to advance, the dream world might soon become just another platform for communication.
With Raduga’s vision, it seems the boundaries of sleep and reality are set to blur.