As we know now scientists can predict your dreams by the signals your brain emit when you are asleep. Now the question is: " Are there any connections between the eye movement, the signal they get from your brain and the dream you have?"
A face is a mirror & our eye is very attractive gift on the line with every human beings .However in ladies world ,whether it may be psycho phobia but it has been & attractive mark for the nature ,to play the part with the destiny .
With this we can not afford to ignore the very important part of our body namely Our MIND connected with our brain ,EYES remain our seeing part which forms the very basic ideas in the line of attraction,for me a foundation in our MIND which generally passes through our conscious mind.
This rays up thinking very often evaporating in a surface of our mind transforming as the part of our dream for which it depends on the individual whether the dream should made reality or otherwise of same .
Yes. This really cool study measured single neuron activity in temporal cortex during dreaming and showed that eye movements during dreams seem to have a similar function as during normal perception. http://www.nature.com/ncomms/2015/150811/ncomms8884/full/ncomms8884.html
During dreaming, eye movements scan our phenomenal world (retinoid space) just as they do during our waking experience. See "Space, self, and the theater of consciousness" on my RG page.
Dreaming is happened during deep sleep, mainly in REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep. So you can see the movement of eye balls while dreaming but eyeball movement is observed without dreaming. Generally eye ball movement is the characteristic of REM sleep
Early research indicated synchronous eye movement during REM was correlated with dream reports (e.g., horizontal shifts for watching a tennis match or vertical ones for looking up and down at a ladder or tall building) but later correlational studies of ocular movement and reports of synchronous dream events have proved less convincing and even doubtful. The jury is always open to more research findings on this and other dream-related research.
Mark Solms’ findings indicate that “REM can occur without dreaming and dreaming can occur without REM”. This suggests that eye movement and dreams are not directly related. My theory is that: rapid eye movement is the results of procedural (motor) memory processing during sleep.