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Josie Malinowski
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Evidence for the preferential incorporation of emotional waking-life experiences into dreams.
J Malinowski, CL Horton
Dreaming 24 (1), 18, 2014
1492014
Metaphor and hyperassociativity: the imagination mechanisms behind emotion assimilation in sleep and dreaming
JE Malinowski, CL Horton
Frontiers in psychology 6, 150080, 2015
1312015
Memory sources of dreams: the incorporation of autobiographical rather than episodic experiences
JE Malinowski, CL Horton
Journal of Sleep Research 23 (4), 441-447, 2014
952014
Autobiographical memory and hyperassociativity in the dreaming brain: implications for memory consolidation in sleep
CL Horton, JE Malinowski
Frontiers in psychology 6, 148786, 2015
862015
The dream-lag effect: Selective processing of personally significant events during Rapid Eye Movement sleep, but not during Slow Wave Sleep
E Van Rijn, JB Eichenlaub, PA Lewis, MP Walker, MG Gaskell, ...
Neurobiology of learning and memory 122, 98-109, 2015
862015
Dreaming and insight
CL Edwards, PM Ruby, JE Malinowski, PD Bennett, MT Blagrove
Frontiers in Psychology 4, 62796, 2013
692013
Incorporation of recent waking-life experiences in dreams correlates with frontal theta activity in REM sleep
JB Eichenlaub, E Van Rijn, MG Gaskell, PA Lewis, E Maby, JE Malinowski, ...
Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience 13 (6), 637-647, 2018
682018
Dreaming and personality: Wake-dream continuity, thought suppression, and the Big Five Inventory
JE Malinowski
Consciousness and cognition 38, 9-15, 2015
402015
Comparing personal insight gains due to consideration of a recent dream and consideration of a recent event using the Ullman and Schredl dream group methods
CL Edwards, JE Malinowski, SL McGee, PD Bennett, PM Ruby, ...
Frontiers in Psychology 6, 144358, 2015
382015
Experiencing “continuity”: A qualitative investigation of waking life in dreams.
J Malinowski, F Fylan, CL Horton
Dreaming 24 (3), 161, 2014
332014
Dreams reflect nocturnal cognitive processes: Early-night dreams are more continuous with waking life, and late-night dreams are more emotional and hyperassociative
JE Malinowski, CL Horton
Consciousness and Cognition 88, 103071, 2021
272021
Themes of continuity: Commentary on “The continuity and discontinuity between waking and dreaming: A Dialogue between Michael Schredl and Allan Hobson concerning the adequacy …
J Malinowski, CL Horton
International Journal of Dream Research 4 (2), 86-92, 2011
252011
Insight from the consideration of REM dreams, non-REM dreams, and daydreams.
M Blagrove, C Edwards, E van Rijn, A Reid, J Malinowski, P Bennett, ...
Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research, and Practice 6 (2), 138, 2019
172019
The effect of time of night on wake–dream continuity.
JE Malinowski, CL Horton
Dreaming 24 (4), 253, 2014
162014
The effects of dream rebound: Evidence for emotion‐processing theories of dreaming
J Malinowski, M Carr, C Edwards, A Ingarfill, A Pinto
Journal of Sleep Research 28 (5), e12827, 2019
152019
High thought suppressors dream more of their negative waking-life experiences than low thought suppressors.
J Malinowski
Dreaming 27 (4), 269, 2017
122017
The psychology of dreaming
J Malinowski
Routledge, 2020
112020
Daydreams incorporate recent waking life concerns but do not show delayed (‘dream-lag’) incorporations
E van Rijn, AM Reid, CL Edwards, JE Malinowski, PM Ruby, ...
Consciousness and Cognition 58, 51-59, 2018
92018
Themes in participants’ understandings of meaning in their Most Recent Dreams: Worries, relationships, and symbolism
J Malinowski
International Journal of Dream Research 9 (2), 115-123, 2016
92016
Insight from the consideration of REM dreams, non-REM dreams, and daydreams. Psychology of Consciousness: Theory, Research, and Practice, 6 (2), 138–162
M Blagrove, C Edwards, E van Rijn, A Reid, J Malinowski, P Bennett, ...
72019
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