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‘Sleeping on it’ really does help and four other recent sleep research breakthroughs

Twenty-six years. That is roughly are spent asleep. Scientists have been trying to explain why we spend so much time sleeping since at least the , but pinning down the exact functions of sleep has proven to be difficult.

Author


  • Dan Denis

    Marie Skłodowska-Curie Senior Research Fellow, University of York

During the past decade, there has been a surge of interest from researchers in the nature and function of sleep. New experimental models coupled with advances in technology and analytical techniques are giving us a deeper look inside the sleeping brain. Here are some of the biggest recent breakthroughs in the science of sleep.

1. We know more about lucid dreaming

No longer on the fringes, the neuroscientific study of dreaming has now become mainstream.

US researchers in a 2017 study woke their participants up at regular intervals during the night and asked them what was going through their minds prior to the alarm call. Sometimes participants couldn’t recall any dreaming. The study team then looked at what was moments before waking.

Participants’ recall of dream content was associated with increased activity in the posterior hot zone, an area of the brain closely . Researchers could predict the presence or absence of dream experiences by monitoring this zone in real time.

Another exciting development in the study of dreams is research into lucid dreams, in which you are dreaming. A 2021 study established between a dreamer and a researcher. In this experiment, participants signalled to the researcher that they were dreaming by moving their eyes in a pre-agreed pattern.

The researcher read out maths problems (what is eight minus six?). The dreamer could respond to this question with eye movements. The dreamers were accurate, indicating they had access to high level cognitive functions. The researchers used , which monitors bodily functions such as breathing and brain activity during sleep, to confirm that participants were asleep.

These discoveries have dream researchers excited about the future of “interactive dreaming”, such as practising a skill or solving a problem in our dreams.

2. Our brain replays memories while we sleep

This year marks the centenary of the first demonstration that . However, a 2023 review of recent research has shown that memories formed during the day while we are sleeping. Researchers discovered this using machine learning techniques to “decode” the contents of the sleeping brain.

found that training algorithms to distinguish between different memories while awake makes it possible to see the same neural patterns re-emerge in the sleeping brain. A different study, also in 2021, found that the more times these patterns re-emerge during sleep, to memory.

In other approaches, scientists have been able to reactivate certain memories by associated with the memory in question while the participant was asleep. A found that when participants’ memory was tested after sleep they remembered more of the stimuli whose sounds were played back during sleep, compared with control stimuli whose sounds were not replayed.

Research has also shown that sleep strengthens memory for the of an experience, restructures our memories to form and helps us come up with we are stuck on. Science is showing that sleeping on it really does help.

3. Sleep keeps our minds healthy

We all know that a lack of sleep makes us feel bad. Laboratory sleep deprivation studies, where researchers keep willing participants awake throughout the night, have been combined with to paint a detailed picture of the sleep-deprived brain. These studies have shown that a lack of sleep severely disrupts the different brain networks. These changes include a breakdown of connectivity between brain regions , and an amplification of those involved in .

The consequence of this is that the sleep-deprived brain is worse at , , and unable to . Sleep loss may even make you less likely to . These findings may explain why poor sleep quality is so .

4. Sleep protects us against neurodegenerative diseases

Although we naturally , mounting evidence suggests that sleep problems earlier in life of dementia.

The build-up of β-amyloid, a , is one of the mechanisms underlying Alzheimer’s disease. Recently, it has become apparent that deep, undisturbed sleep is good for out of the brain. Sleep deprivation increases the the rate of build-up of β-amyloid in parts of the brain involved in memory, . A longitudinal study published in 2020 found that sleep problems were associated with a higher rate of β-amyloid accumulation at a follow-up . In a different study, published in 2022, sleep parameters of cognitive decline in participants over the following two years.

5. We can engineer sleep

The good news is that research is developing treatments to get a better night’s sleep and boost its benefits.

For example, the and the recommend cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia (CBT-I). identifying thoughts, feelings and behaviour that contribute to insomnia, which can then be modified to help promote sleep.

In 2022, a CBT-I app became the recommended by England’s ³Ô¹ÏÍøÕ¾ Institute for Health and Care Excellence for treatment on the NHS.

These interventions can improve other aspects of our lives as well. A of 65 clinical trials found that improving sleep via CBT-I reduced symptoms of depression, anxiety, rumination and stress.

The Conversation

Dan Denis receives funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101028886.

/Courtesy of The Conversation. View in full .