Technically Speaking: Gadgets

March 16, 2004

Yumemi Kobo (Dream Machine)

Filed under: — Tony S. @ 12:31 pm


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Japanese toymaker Takara has created a gizmo that well help you craft the perfect dream for the evening. The invention is a work in progress but the preliminary results have been very promising, indicating that the gadget can greatly improve the odds of experiencing a desired dream. The steps you have to go through to get it to work properly seem to be able to create dreams all by itself.

First, users attach a photograph or image of a desired dream to the Yumemi Kobo.

Then the hopeful dreamers concentrate on the image, playing out the desired dream in their head while making a voice recording of key words describing their fantasy.

Next they insert one of the dream machine’s scents in the fragrance dispenser and select accompanying music from the tracks offered in the device’s database.

“These (selections) are based on research done by sleep researchers who have an idea of what fragrances and music relaxes people the most – so there is a logic behind the selections,” Harwood said. “For most, listening to Guns N’ Roses is not the way to go.”

Now the dreamers are ready to hit the sack. They turn on the dream machine, and it starts to lull them to sleep with soft lights and serenades.

During the next eight hours, while the Yumemi Kobo’s owner snoozes, the device is set to activate periodically in accordance with the user’s REM sleep, the period associated with dreaming, during which the sleeper’s eyeballs jerk rapidly.

“REM occurs for around an hour, an hour and a half. The machine estimates when most people achieve this,” Harwood said.

This is when the dream controller is at its most active. It plays the selected music, releases the fragrance and repeats the recorded phrase. All are geared to trigger the desired dream in the sleeping subject.

Despite all this activity, Harwood said, the would-be dreamer doesn’t lose any beauty sleep.

“You would think it would be distracting, but the key is that it operates on a timer that coincides with REM. It basically doesn’t do anything until you are in REM phase, and then these things are very low-key,” he said.

Eight hours later, sleep time is over. The dream machine gently awakens its owner with dim lights and soft music to avoid startling the sleeper and causing the dream to be forgotten.

This item will be selling in Japan sometime in May and it will probably make it to the US in early 2005.

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