Real-Life Inception: Army Looks to ‘Counteract Nightmares’ With Digital Dreams | Danger Room | Wired.com

 

Segment from the article: Real-Life Inception: Army Looks to ‘Counteract Nightmares’ With Digital Dreams | Danger Room | Wired.com.

 

Previous post
Next post

Real-Life Inception: Army Looks to ‘Counteract Nightmares’ With Digital Dreams

A soldier tries to sleep. But he is not safe in his dreams. Jolted awake by a nightmare, the combat veteran fumbles in the dark for his 3-D glasses.

He puts them on. Around him are the faces of people whom he trusts. They fight the darkness with him. The soldier’s re-lived this scene in his head and the laboratory over and over again, until it has become reassuringly familiar. The soldier knows that his pixelated friends will take him away from these troubled dreams. When the scene is over, he takes off his goggles and looks around him. The soldier is home.

The U.S. Army wants this dream sequence to become reality. In an Army-backed experiment called “Power Dreaming,” Naval Hospital Bremerton in Washington State will help traumatized troops battle their nightmares — with soothing, digitally-made dreams crafted in virtual worlds. No, this is not the script for the sequel to Inception.

The research project is in its early planning and is not expected to launch until next year, a hospital spokesperson told Danger Room. But it is picking up momentum. Last week, the Army awarded almost half a million dollars to a consulting company for help developing the experiment.

Read the entire article at: Real-Life Inception: Army Looks to ‘Counteract Nightmares’ With Digital Dreams | Danger Room | Wired.com.

 


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s