In 1983, working with LaBerge and another scientist, she was hooked up to a vaginal probe and signaled with her eyes that she was going to attempt to have an in-dream orgasm. The body is largely paralyzed during deep sleep, but D'Urso could move her eyes, which she used to signal that she had started or completed a task in her sleep. Throughout the 80s, camera crew after camera crew would travel to the Stanford sleep lab to watch D'Urso-hooked up with about 50 wires to brainwave monitors, which ensured she was actually dreaming-as she performed tasks in her sleep. Her ability to effectively reach lucidity in her dreams made her the perfect muse for Stephen LaBerge, who was studying lucid dreams at Stanford. The first officially recorded lucid dream orgasm came from a woman named Beverly D'Urso.
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