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Journal Article

Citation

Rubinstein K, Krippner S. Int. J. Psychosom. 1991; 38(1-4): 40-44.

Affiliation

Saybrook Institute of San Francisco, California.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1991, International Psychosomatics Institute, Publisher Chatham Press)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

1778685

Abstract

We studied 108 male and 110 female dreams that had been collected in response to a television announcement. We did not find a number of gender differences that had been previously reported. We found no difference between men's and women's dreams in the amount of aggression, friendliness, sexuality, male characters, weapons, or clothes. However, women's dreams still contained a higher number of family members, babies, children, and indoor settings than did men. We also looked at geographic differences, finding that while patterns of aggression did not distinguish men from women, they did distinguish residents of different areas. In dreams in which the dreamer was either the aggressor or victim, dreamers from the East coast were more likely to be the aggressor than those from the Midwest and West coast.


Language: en

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