“Sleeping is no mean art: for its sake one must stay awake all day.” -Friedrich Nietzsche
1. Place to sleep Sleep
is slippery beast, not least in how it's susceptible to our perceptions of its quality. If we think we've had a wonderful sleep last night, we feel and perform better, even if our sleep was actually the same as usual. This is what Draganich and Erdal (2014) found in a study which had participants hooked up to sensors which they were told were measuring the quality of their sleep. Actually the sensors weren't measuring anything. Instead the researchers randomly told some people they'd had better sleep than others. When they were given a cognitive test the next day, those who'd been told they slept the best also did the best in the test. Their self-reported sleep quality had little effect on the test results. The researchers dubbed this ‘placebo sleep’.2. Emotional sleep
During sleep our memories are reorganized and made stronger–in particular the emotional centers of the brain are highly active. Psychologists have found that the mind is cataloguing our memories and deciding what to keep and what to throw away. Sleep expert Elizabeth A. Kensinger explains: “Sleep is making memories stronger. It also seems to be doing something which I think is so much more interesting, and that is reorganizing and restructuring memories.” A review of studies on sleep found that we tend to hold on to the most emotional parts of our memories.
3. Blame bad sleep on the full moon
If your sleep wasn't up to scratch last night, perhaps it was partly down to the phase of the moon. People often complain of worse sleep around the full moon, but until recently scientists have been sceptical. A study by Cajochen et al., 2013, though… “…studied 33 volunteers in two age groups in the lab while they slept. Their brain patterns were monitored while sleeping, along with eye movements and hormone secretions.” This is what they found: “The data show that around the full moon, brain activity related to deep sleep dropped by 30 percent. People also took five minutes longer to fall asleep, and they slept for twenty minutes less time overall.” The researchers think it may be because we have a kind of ‘moon clock’ inside us that tracks its cycles and affects our hormone levels. This is in addition to the better known circadian rhythms which affect many bodily processes during the day.
4. Junk food cravings
One of the dangers of not getting enough sleep is craving junk food. Recent research from UC Berkeley scanned the brains of 24 participants after both a good and a bad night's sleep (Greer et al., 2013). After disturbed sleep, there was increased activity in the depths of the brain, areas which are generally associated with rewards and automatic behaviour. It seems a lack of sleep robs people of their self-control and so their good intentions are quickly forgotten. Hence those junk food cravings get out of control.
5. Learn in your sleep
It's not possible to learn something new when you sleep, like a foreign language, but you can reinforce something you already know. Gobel et al. (2012) found that students learned to play a series of musical notes better after listening to them during a 90-minute nap. One of the authors, Paul Reber explained: “The critical difference is that our research shows that memory is strengthened for something you've already learned. Rather than learning something new in your sleep, we're talking about enhancing an existing memory by re-activating information recently acquired.”
6. Benefits of a six-minute nap
Even tiny amounts of sleep can be beneficial. A study by Lahl (2008) found that even a short six-minute nap was enough to measurably improve performance on a test of word recall.
7. Night owls have lower integrity white matter
Different neural structures have been discovered between people who are night owls and early risers. Research on 59 participants, those who were confirmed night owls (preferring late to bed and late to rise) had lower integrity of the white matter in various areas of the brain (Rosenberg et al., 2014). Lower integrity in these areas has been linked to depression and cognitive instability. Unfortunately work, school and other institutions mostly require early rising, which, for night owls, causes problems. As night owls find it difficult to get to sleep early, they tend to carry large amounts of sleep debt. In other words, they're exhausted all the time and their brains clearly show the consequences.
8. Children's sleep
Children are processing way more information than adults because everything is so new to them. That is why irregular bedtimes at a young age can reduce their cognitive performance. One study had children learning a task which had a hidden pattern. After a night's sleep they were much more likely to guess the secret pattern without being told (Wilhelm et al., 2013). Children also outperformed adults, suggesting that sleep was more important to them for this task.
9. Adolescents need more sleep
Adolescents typically require an hour or two more sleep than adults. If so, why do we make them get up so early for school? One study has delayed the waking up time of adolescents at a boarding school by just 25 minutes (Boergers et al., 2013). They found that afterwards the number of students getting more than 8 hours sleep a night jumped from 18% to 44%. On top of this, the students experienced less daytime sleepiness, were less depressed, and found themselves using less caffeine.
10. Consolidate motor skills
When we are learning a motor skill, like playing the piano, our brains continue to process the information after we've finished. In research by Allen (2012), musicians who practised a new song had improved in speed and accuracy compared with before a night's sleep. Like memory, a good night's sleep can also improve motor performance.
11. Relationship damage
People are usually at their worst after a bad night's sleep, but what does that do to their intimate relationships? A new study finds that even one bad night's sleep can be surprisingly damaging to a relationship (Gordon & Chen, 2013). They found that even for those who were good sleepers, just a single night's poor sleep was associated with increased relationship conflict the next day.
12. Hidden caves open up during sleep
If sleep has such amazing restorative powers then what is going on physiologically? New research has discovered “hidden caves” inside the brain, which open up during sleep, allowing cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to flush out potential neurotoxins, like β-amyloid, which has been associated with Alzheimer's disease (Xie et al., 2013). The flushing out of toxins by the CSF may be central to sleep's wondrous powers.
Last word Last
word to the playwright Wilson Mizner who said: “The amount of sleep required by the average person is five minutes more.” Quite right.
Source : www.whydontyoutrythis.com
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