Dark is far, far is more creative, and night owls tend more far (and creative) than morning larks. Fitting with this, and the confused but wide ranging nature of the sleeping mind, it seems to me the mind is likely in a more far state while asleep. If so, sleep should be more creative, which it is:
That seems like a really, really, really important finding about task reactivation through smell.
So we can start working on a problem while eating popcorn, then go to sleep and time-release some popcorn odor to work on it while we're sleeping?
That is so cool.
That seems like a really, really, really important finding about task reactivation through smell.
So we can start working on a problem while eating popcorn, then go to sleep and time-release some popcorn odor to work on it while we're sleeping?
That is so cool.