Sleep learning - the act or process of learning during sleep by listening to recordings repeatedly. lərn iŋ n HYPNOPEDIA … Medical dictionary Attempted instruction in a subject, such as a foreign language, during sleep, usually by means of recordings. Main Entry: ↑sleep … Useful english dictionary.* * * sleep learning same as ↑hypnopaedia (see under ↑hypno ). The non-recall of material presented during sleep.
![claire bronson claire bronson](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/M/MV5BNDljOTU4M2EtMTg4My00MDU0LWExNjctYmVjMjNiOWU5ZGIxXkEyXkFqcGdeQXVyMTM2NjEyNDI@._V1_.jpg)
"Journal of Experimental Psychology", 43, 75-79. The retention of material presented during sleep. "Journal of Abnormal Social Psychology", 37, 406-408. The breaking of a habit by suggestion during sleep. They say you retain knowledge even when you're sleeping." He then read The Book of Job to Montag. * In " Fahrenheit 451", Faber tells Montag, "So if you like, I'll read you to sleep nights. * The twins Hank and Dean Venture, of the animated television program " The Venture Bros.", are home-schooled through the use of hypnopædic beds. Coach Z takes it home and listens to it while he sleeps, and the next day is able to pronounce "job" correctly, but forgets Homestar's name. After unsuccessfully trying several methods, Strong Sad gives him a tape of him repeating the word job thousands of times, "from when (he) was practicing the dictionary". * In one short on Homestar Runner Coach Z attempts to overcome his speech impediment with the word "job" (which he pronounces as "jorb"). The gramophone gets stuck at the phrase "omelette du fromage", and Dexter finds out the next morning that it is all he is capable of saying. * In the episode of " Dexter's Laboratory", The Big Cheese, Dexter hooks himself up to a gramophone that repeats his lesson for the class test the next morning. However, the mail-order company sends him vocabulary builder tapes instead, and Homer gets fatter and fatter while his vocabulary increases, through hypnopædia. * In an episode of " The Simpsons", Homer orders hypnosis tapes which are supposed to induce weight loss. * In the computer game " Outpost 2" the amount of time required to train workers into scientists can be reduced through a research topic called hypnopædia, which causes them to learn in their sleep. When Rimmer told Lister that they both received the same benefit, Lister replied that was true neither of them got any sleep. * In the BBC2 sitcom " Red Dwarf", Arnold Rimmer used sleep-learning tapes such as "Learn Esperanto While You Sleep" and "Learn Quantum Theory While You Sleep", to the dismay of his bunkmate Dave Lister. This reflected very badly on the government, which had sanctioned the experiment, so hypnopædia was used to undo the conditioning. The conditioning was a new technique which was supposed to rehabilitate violent criminals in a short period of time, but which resulted in Alex attempting to commit suicide. * In Anthony Burgess's 1962 novel " A Clockwork Orange", it is used to reverse the effects of the Ludovico Technique, a form of operant conditioning, which was used on the main character Alex to make him incapable of violent behavior. The inception of this conditioning involved putting the subject into a hypnotic sleep and appraising them of a certain situation once they awoke they would believe it, regardless of the validity.
Claire bronson series#
* In the popular BBC Radio series Journey into Space (1953-1958), during the second and third parts of the trilogy, there were said to be Martians abducting people from the Earth and "Conditioning" them to obey instructions or to make them believe things that were not true.
![claire bronson claire bronson](https://i.pinimg.com/280x280_RS/44/68/97/446897761e23827edf9db227493a0714.jpg)
The boy was unable to comprehend what he had heard via hypnopædia, but it was soon realized that hypnopædia could be used to effectively make suggestions about morality. In the novel, sleep-learning is supposed to have been discovered after a Polish-speaking boy named Reuben Rabinovitch was able to recite an entire radio broadcast in English after listening to it in his sleep.
![claire bronson claire bronson](https://www.cinema-movietheater.com/s/cc_images/teaserbox_12771850.jpg)
* In Aldous Huxley's 1932 novel " Brave New World", it is used for the conditioning of children into the novel's fictional future culture. It has found its way into some influential science fiction and other literature. Sleep-learning (also known as hypnopædia) attempts to convey information to a sleeping person, typically by playing a sound recording to them while they sleep.