<?xml version="1.0"?>
<Articles JournalTitle="Journal of Sleep Sciences">
  <Article>
    <Journal>
      <PublisherName>Tehran University of Medical Sciences</PublisherName>
      <JournalTitle>Journal of Sleep Sciences</JournalTitle>
      <Issn>2476-2938</Issn>
      <Volume>7</Volume>
      <Issue>1-2</Issue>
      <PubDate PubStatus="epublish">
        <Year>2023</Year>
        <Month>06</Month>
        <Day>25</Day>
      </PubDate>
    </Journal>
    <title locale="en_US">What Enables Our Brain to Dream? A Bio-Cybernetics View</title>
    <FirstPage>51</FirstPage>
    <LastPage>52</LastPage>
    <AuthorList>
      <Author>
        <FirstName>Mortaza</FirstName>
        <LastName>Soroush</LastName>
        <affiliation locale="en_US">Bio-Intelligence Research Unit, Department of Electrical Engineering, Sharif University of Technology, Tehran, Iran</affiliation>
      </Author>
    </AuthorList>
    <History>
      <PubDate PubStatus="received">
        <Year>2021</Year>
        <Month>02</Month>
        <Day>28</Day>
      </PubDate>
      <PubDate PubStatus="accepted">
        <Year>2021</Year>
        <Month>05</Month>
        <Day>09</Day>
      </PubDate>
    </History>
    <abstract locale="en_US">There are several lines of evidence that human dreams depend on the brain's properties in terms of dream structure and its meaning alike (1). The human brain has specific features such as self-organization, memory, self-adaptation, feedback, disorder and diversity, non-equilibrium, etc., which enable the brain to create complex cogni-tive and behavioral functions the most interesting of which must be &#x201C;dreaming&#x201D; (2, 3).</abstract>
    <web_url>https://jss.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jss/article/view/193</web_url>
  </Article>
</Articles>
