| Why Do We Sleep?
 The
answer may
surprise you Sleep is an activity that occupies a whopping
one-third of our time on the planet. That
is why it is so extraordinary to contemplate
that until about 10 years ago, absolutely no
one had any idea why we needed to sleep.
Even now, while there still is not complete
agreement about sleep’s role in the human
experience, there is growing evidence that the
reason we need to sleep is not just so that the
body can physically recuperate from the day’s
activity, but so that the brain can learn. The Incredible
Sleeping Brain One of the first things you have to overcome
if you ever get a chance to listen
in on a living brain while it is slumbering
is disbelief. The reason is that the brain does not appear to be
asleep at all. Instead, the organ is almost unbelievably active during
“rest,” with legions of neurons crackling electrical commands
to each other in constantly shifting patterns, actually displaying
greater rhythmical activity during sleep than when the brain is
wide awake. The reason for this activity has to do with the tug-of-war
  nature of the sleep cycle itself. Your sleep/wake tendencies can be
  thought of as the byproduct of a constant battle between two
  opposing drives in your body. One of these drives, the Circadian
  Arousal System, is trying to keep you awake and alert all the time.
  The other, the Homeostatic Sleep Drive, is trying to make you
  drowsy so that you stay unconscious all the time. These two
  drives are locked in a daily warfare with a cycle of victory and
  surrender so predictable you can
  actually graph it.   An interesting consequence
  of this sleep/wake conflict occurs
  in the early afternoon and is
  sometimes called the “nap zone.”
  Usually experienced sometime
  between 2 and 4 p.m., it is a
  form of extreme, though temporary,
  drowsiness. It can be nearly
  impossible to get anything
  complex done at this time;
  if you choose to attempt to
  push through (which is what
  most of us try), you can spend
  much of your afternoon fighting
  a gnawing tiredness.   The whole concept of “siesta” — a phenomenon institutionalized
  in many other cultures — likely came as an explicit
  reaction to the nap zone. Most scientists believe that a long
  sleep in the night and a short nap during the midday represents
  human sleep behavior in its most naturally genetic, highest quality
  form.   Though sleep cycles are burned deep into the genetic fabric of
  the human brain, they are subject to regulatory forces, some of
  which are also genetic in origin. For instance, approximately one
  in 10 humans is what is formally designated in the scientific
  literature as an “early chronotype” or “lark.” Larks report being
  most alert around noon and feel most productive a few hours
  before they eat lunch. They often wake at 6 a.m., get drowsy in the
  early evening, and go to bed (or feel like they want to go to bed)
  around 9 p.m.   About two in 10 people exist at the other end of the sleep
  spectrum. They are called “late chronotypes” or “owls.” In general,
  owls report being most alert around 6 p.m., rarely want to go
  to bed before 3 a.m., and rarely want to wake before 10 a.m.
  The behaviors of larks and owls are very specific and potentially
  genetic. The rest of us have chronotypic behavior that falls somewhere
  between the patterns of larks and owls.   Sleep and 
  Learning So what, then, do sleep and its regulatory functions
  have to do with learning? Although the
  earliest data establishing a link between sleep
  and learning focused on the effects of sleep deprivation, the
  opposite is now abundantly clear: Healthy sleep can produce a
  significant learning boost in certain tasks.  One study stands out in particular. The experiment involved
  giving students a series of math problems and providing them with
  a method to solve the problems. Unbeknownst to these students,
  there was also an easier, “shortcut” way to solve the same problems,
  which potentially could be discovered while doing the exercise.   During the initial training, however, students never discovered
  the easier method. So the question for researchers was:
  “Is there any way to jumpstart, even speed up, their insight?”   The answer is “yes,” but only if you allow them to sleep on it.
  When you let 12 hours pass after the initial training, and then
  ask the students to do more problems, approximately 20 percent
  actually discover the shortcut. But, if in that 12 hours you also
  allow eight or so hours of regular sleep, the number of students
  discovering the shortcut triples to approximately 60 percent. No
  matter how many times the experiment is run, the sleep group
  consistently outperforms the non-sleep group to the tune of
  approximately three to one.   This is just one example of the phenomenon. Sleep enhancement
  has been shown for tasks that involve visual texture discrimination,
  motor adaptations testing, motor sequencing, and
  other cognitive skills. The type of learning most sensitive to sleep
  improvement is a category called procedural learning (not surprisingly,
  this involves learning a procedure). The effect can also
  be shown in the negative. Simply disrupt the night’s sleep at specific
  stages and then retest in the morning. No overnight learning
  improvement will be observed.   Even the simple act of taking a nap can show cognitive benefit.
  One study conducted by researchers at NASA showed that
  a 26-minute nap improved a pilot’s performance by more than
  34 percent. Another study showed that a 45-minute nap produced
  a similar boost in cognitive performance, a boost that
  lasted more than six hours.   These data and others like them represent a consistent and
  increasingly well-characterized finding: Sleep is intimately
  involved in learning. It is this consistent finding that caused some
  researchers, now almost 10 years ago, to ask a deeper question
  about rats and mazes, specifically having to do with leaving a
  bunch of electrodes deliberately stuck inside some rats’ brains.   Rats, Mazes, and a 
  Revolutionary Discovery It is possible these days to
  put electrodes inside a living
  brain and listen in on
  the neural chatter while it is thinking. Even in a tiny rat’s brain,
  it is not unusual to listen to up to 500 different neurons at once.
  And just what are they saying? If you listen in while the rat
  is acquiring new information, for instance while it navigates
  a new maze, a very discrete “maze-specific” pattern of electrical
  stimulation begins to emerge. Working something like the old
  Morse Code, these neurons begin to crackle in a specifically timed sequence. Once acquired, the rat will always fire off that
  pattern when negotiating the maze.  Interestingly, if the electrodes stay in place when the rat goes to
  sleep, something very mysterious can be observed. The rat begins to
  replay the maze pattern sequence. Always executed in a very specific
  stage of sleep, the rat repeats the pattern over and over again during
  the night. If the rat is awakened during that stage, the rat has trouble
  remembering how to navigate the maze the next day. The rat is
  consolidating the day’s learning the night after that learning
  occurred. An interruption of that sleep disrupts this learning cycle.   Does something like that happen in humans? You bet it does,
  depending upon the type of learning being measured. Humans
  appear to replay certain types of daily learning experiences at
  night. Some of the best research has been done with spatial
  memory tasks, but it has also been shown for other types of
  learning as well. Interestingly, the replay of the day’s learning is
  done in a highly compressed format, and even appears to be happening
  in the same stage of sleep as the rats’.   These findings represent a bombshell of an idea. The data
  seem to suggest that some kind of offline processing is occurring
  at night. And that begins to address the question posed in the
  title of this article: Why do we sleep? Is it possible that the reason
  why we need to sleep is simply to shut off the exterior world
  for a while, allowing us to divert more attentional resources to
  this processing? The answer to that question may be “yes” and
  represents the first real clue as to why sleep is so important.
  We may need to sleep so that we can learn.   Lessons for the 
  Real World As is true with any good scientific discourse,
  these data have been met with
  some controversy. Increasingly, however,
  it is becoming clear that one of the functions of sleep involves the
  need for our really big brains to review what they have learned
  during the day. This isn’t a trivial need and is demonstrable in the
  negative. The effects of sleep deprivation are thought to cost U.S.
  businesses more than $100 billion a year.   What if schools and businesses took the sleep needs of their
  students and employees seriously? Here are three possibilities:   CHRONOTYPES. What if we began to match chronotypes to
  educational experiences? Teachers are just as likely to be late chronotypes
  as their students. Why not put them together at the time
  of the day when their teaching/learning would be maximized?
  A similar case could be made in the work world. What if we began
  to match chronotypes to work schedules? Given that 20 percent of
  the workforce is already at sub-optimal productivity in the current
  8–5 model, what if that model were permanently broken up?   NAPS. Given the data about the powerful effects of short
  bursts of sleep on human cognition, is it time to take the nap zone
  seriously in schools and offices? Do you recall the NASA
  research? “What other management strategy will improve people’s
  performance 34 percent in just 26 minutes?” exclaims Mark Rosekind,
  the NASA scientist who conducted the research.   SLEEPING ON IT. Lastly, if we took the data about sleep and
  the ability of a good night’s rest to upgrade the insight rate, schools
  and businesses might tackle the most intractable issues at miniretreats.
  After being presented with the problem, students or
  employees would not start coming to conclusions, or even begin
  sharing ideas, before they had had an intervening eight hours of
  sleep. Would they experience the same increase in problem-solving
  rates demonstrated in a laboratory setting?   Notice that these ideas are posed as questions, not as prescriptions.
  This is done deliberately, because I have no idea whether
  anything I just mentioned here would work. Beyond the laboratory,
  there is very little research that tells us how we might harness
  the wild bucking bronco of the human sleep schedule. Thus,
  we don’t know if creating a chronotypically conscious learning
  environment or workplace would boost test scores or productivity.
  We don’t know if creating a school or workspace sensitive to
  the nap zone would give a lift to learning and productivity. We
  have no idea if, in a real-world setting, letting a group “sleep on it”
  would actually do anything more than waste time.   Why don’t we know? Because, as I say so often, brain scientists,
  educators, and business professionals haven’t gotten together to do
  such research. And that was exactly why The Brain Center for
  Applied Learning Research was created at ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ.
  In the meantime, we are left with a simple brain rule — that
  sleep is important to the learning process — and an opportunity
  to find out how that might apply to the real world of education. —By John Medina
  Director of the
  Seattle Pacific
  university Brain
  Center for Applied
  Learning Research —  illustrations
    By John lavin
 
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