Humanity may have just crossed a new frontier in communication. A California-based startup, REMspace, claims to have successfully enabled two people to exchange a simple message while they were both asleep and dreaming. The experiment, which took place in September 2024, reportedly allowed two lucid dreamers to send and receive a word without waking up. If validated by independent scientists, this achievement would mark a major shift in how we understand sleep and interaction.
How the dream exchange experiment worked
The experiment did not rely on telepathy but on specific technology designed to bridge the gap between the dream world and reality. Lucid dreaming is a state where a person is asleep but knows they are dreaming. This awareness allows them to perform conscious actions, such as moving their eyes or sending signals, which researchers can track.
The role of the server and sensors
On September 24, two participants slept in their separate homes, connected to a central server by special equipment. This apparatus monitored their brain waves and other biological data to detect exactly when they entered a lucid dream.
When the first participant entered the lucid state, the server generated a random word – “Zhilak” – and sent it to him through earbuds. The participant heard the word inside his dream and repeated it. Sensors captured his response, and the server stored it. Eight minutes later, the second participant entered a lucid dream. The server sent her the stored message. She received it in her dream and confirmed the word after waking up. REMspace describes this as the first “chat” ever exchanged in dreams.
Remmyo: a language for dreams
To make this work, the team used a special language called Remmyo. They developed this language to be detected by sensitive electromyography sensors, which track tiny muscle movements in the face. In previous research, scientists have shown that MRI can decode simple dream content and detect specific signals. This suggests that future communication might not just be simple words, but potentially complex conversations.
Why scientists remain skeptical
While the announcement has generated excitement, the scientific community urges caution. The claim comes from a press release by a commercial startup, not from a peer-reviewed study published in a scientific journal.
Lack of peer review
Peer review is the standard process where independent experts check data and methods to ensure a discovery is real. Until REMspace releases their full data for this scrutiny, the claim remains unverified. Independent researchers will need to replicate the results to rule out chance or other explanations.
Michael Raduga’s history
The startup is led by Michael Raduga, a researcher known for bold and sometimes controversial experiments. In 2023, he made headlines for implanting a microchip into his own brain to control his dreams, a dangerous procedure performed without professional medical help. While this shows his dedication to the field, it also makes some mainstream scientists hesitant to accept his new claims without rigorous proof.
Future applications of dream communication
If the technology proves reliable, the founders believe it could create a new industry. Raduga suggests that REM sleep could become the next major market after artificial intelligence.
Mental health and skill training
Beyond the novelty of chatting in sleep, the technology could have practical uses. Therapists might one day guide patients through nightmares or trauma in real time. Students or professionals could practice skills, such as public speaking or surgery, in a realistic dream simulation with feedback from a mentor. The idea is to turn the third of our lives we spend sleeping into productive or healing time.
What you can do about it
For now, this technology is not available to the public. However, you can still explore the world of lucid dreaming on your own. Keeping a dream journal and performing “reality checks” during the day – like trying to push your finger through your palm – can train your brain to recognize when you are dreaming. If you are interested in the science, follow reputable science news outlets to see if REMspace’s claims are validated by future studies.
Sources & related information
Business Wire – REMspace – Breakthrough from REMspace: First Ever Communication Between People in Dreams – 2024
The official press release from REMspace details the experiment where two individuals exchanged the word “Zhilak” using electromyography sensors and a server.
Tom’s Guide – Lucid dreaming study: First ever two-way communication recorded during sleep – 2024
A report covering the methodology and the skepticism from the wider scientific community regarding the lack of peer-reviewed data.
Michael Raduga – Remmyo: a language for dreams – 2020
Background research by Michael Raduga on Remmyo, a constructed language designed to be spoken and detected during lucid dreams.
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