1 00:00:00,130 --> 00:00:02,936 Sleep is perhaps the single most effective thing 2 00:00:02,960 --> 00:00:05,073 that we can do each and every day 3 00:00:05,097 --> 00:00:08,816 to reset the health of our brain and our body. 4 00:00:08,840 --> 00:00:12,756 And by understanding a little bit more about what sleep is, 5 00:00:12,780 --> 00:00:17,238 perhaps we can get the chance to improve both the quantity and the quality 6 00:00:17,262 --> 00:00:18,269 of our sleep. 7 00:00:18,299 --> 00:00:20,136 [Sleeping with Science] 8 00:00:20,136 --> 00:00:21,800 (Music) 9 00:00:23,130 --> 00:00:25,807 So, exactly what is sleep? 10 00:00:26,270 --> 00:00:28,914 Well, sleep, at least in human beings, 11 00:00:28,938 --> 00:00:31,926 is subdivided into two main types. 12 00:00:31,950 --> 00:00:35,306 On the one hand, we have non-rapid eye movement sleep, 13 00:00:35,330 --> 00:00:37,026 or non-REM sleep for short. 14 00:00:37,050 --> 00:00:38,216 But on the other hand, 15 00:00:38,240 --> 00:00:42,226 we have rapid eye movement sleep, or REM sleep. 16 00:00:42,250 --> 00:00:45,658 And non-REM sleep has been further subdivided 17 00:00:45,682 --> 00:00:47,841 into four separate stages, 18 00:00:47,865 --> 00:00:51,866 unimaginatively called stages one through four, 19 00:00:51,890 --> 00:00:54,406 increasing in their depth of sleep. 20 00:00:54,430 --> 00:00:58,226 And as we go into those light stages of non-REM sleep, 21 00:00:58,250 --> 00:01:01,026 your heart rate starts to decrease, 22 00:01:01,050 --> 00:01:03,186 your body temperature starts to drop 23 00:01:03,210 --> 00:01:07,236 and your electrical brain wave activity starts to slow down. 24 00:01:07,260 --> 00:01:11,416 But as we move into deeper non-rapid eye movement sleep, 25 00:01:11,440 --> 00:01:13,316 stages three and four, 26 00:01:13,340 --> 00:01:16,326 now all of a sudden the brain erupts 27 00:01:16,350 --> 00:01:20,065 with these huge, big, powerful brain waves. 28 00:01:20,470 --> 00:01:25,336 The body is actually recharged in terms of its immune system. 29 00:01:25,360 --> 00:01:29,912 We also get this beautiful overhaul of our cardiovascular system. 30 00:01:30,300 --> 00:01:32,706 And, in fact, upstairs in the brain, 31 00:01:32,730 --> 00:01:35,976 deep non-REM sleep will help consolidate memories 32 00:01:36,000 --> 00:01:39,676 and fixate them into the neural architecture of the brain. 33 00:01:39,700 --> 00:01:42,041 So that's non-REM sleep. 34 00:01:42,065 --> 00:01:44,526 But let's come on to REM sleep, 35 00:01:44,550 --> 00:01:46,736 which is the other main type of sleep. 36 00:01:46,760 --> 00:01:51,246 And it's during REM sleep when we principally have the most vivid, 37 00:01:51,270 --> 00:01:54,136 the most hallucinogenic types of dreams. 38 00:01:54,160 --> 00:01:58,236 The brain wave activity actually starts to speed up again. 39 00:01:58,260 --> 00:02:04,876 It's during REM sleep that we receive almost a form of emotional first aid. 40 00:02:04,900 --> 00:02:09,376 And it's also during REM sleep where we get a boost for creativity, 41 00:02:09,400 --> 00:02:12,176 that it stitches information together 42 00:02:12,200 --> 00:02:14,709 so that we wake up with solutions 43 00:02:14,733 --> 00:02:18,176 to previously difficult problems that we were facing. 44 00:02:18,200 --> 00:02:20,556 Coming back to these two types of sleep, 45 00:02:20,580 --> 00:02:24,836 it turns out that non-REM and REM will play out 46 00:02:24,860 --> 00:02:28,616 in a battle for brain domination throughout the night, 47 00:02:28,640 --> 00:02:33,046 and that cerebral war is going to be won and lost 48 00:02:33,070 --> 00:02:34,836 every 90 minutes, 49 00:02:34,860 --> 00:02:38,059 and then it's going to be replayed every 90 minutes. 50 00:02:38,544 --> 00:02:44,252 And what this produces is a standard cycling architecture of human sleep, 51 00:02:44,276 --> 00:02:46,180 a standard 90-minute cycle. 52 00:02:46,759 --> 00:02:48,486 But what's different, however, 53 00:02:48,510 --> 00:02:54,356 is that the ratio of non-REM to REM within those 90-minute cycles 54 00:02:54,380 --> 00:02:57,356 changes as we move across the night, 55 00:02:57,380 --> 00:02:59,826 such that in the first half the night, 56 00:02:59,850 --> 00:03:02,606 the majority of those 90-minute cycles 57 00:03:02,630 --> 00:03:06,006 are comprised of lots of deep non-REM sleep, 58 00:03:06,030 --> 00:03:09,966 particularly stages three and four of non-REM sleep. 59 00:03:09,990 --> 00:03:13,346 But as we push through to the second half of the night, 60 00:03:13,370 --> 00:03:17,476 now that seesaw balance actually shifts over, 61 00:03:17,500 --> 00:03:20,796 and instead, most of those 90-minute cycles 62 00:03:20,820 --> 00:03:25,530 are comprised of a lot more rapid eye movement sleep, or dream sleep, 63 00:03:25,554 --> 00:03:28,506 as well as stage-two non-REM sleep, 64 00:03:28,530 --> 00:03:30,696 that lighter form of non-REM sleep. 65 00:03:30,720 --> 00:03:34,268 And it turns out that there are implications 66 00:03:34,292 --> 00:03:38,025 for understanding how sleep is structured in this way. 67 00:03:38,049 --> 00:03:42,786 Let's take someone who typically goes to bed at 10pm, 68 00:03:42,810 --> 00:03:44,817 and they wake up at 6am, 69 00:03:44,841 --> 00:03:47,068 so they have an eight-hour sleep window. 70 00:03:47,488 --> 00:03:49,998 But this morning, they have to wake up early 71 00:03:50,022 --> 00:03:52,336 for an early morning meeting, 72 00:03:52,360 --> 00:03:54,426 or they want to get a jump start on the day 73 00:03:54,450 --> 00:03:55,816 to get to the gym. 74 00:03:55,840 --> 00:03:59,796 And as a consequence, they have to wake up at 4am in the morning, 75 00:03:59,820 --> 00:04:02,036 rather than 6am in the morning. 76 00:04:02,060 --> 00:04:04,376 How much sleep have they actually lost? 77 00:04:04,400 --> 00:04:07,026 Two hours out of an eight-hour night of sleep 78 00:04:07,050 --> 00:04:11,107 means that they've lost 25 percent of their sleep. 79 00:04:11,559 --> 00:04:13,771 Well, yes and no. 80 00:04:13,795 --> 00:04:17,116 They have lost 25 percent of all of their sleep, 81 00:04:17,140 --> 00:04:21,530 but because REM sleep comes mostly in the second half of the night 82 00:04:21,554 --> 00:04:23,546 and particularly in those last few hours, 83 00:04:23,570 --> 00:04:28,931 they may have lost perhaps 50, 60, maybe even 70 percent 84 00:04:28,955 --> 00:04:30,746 of all of their REM sleep. 85 00:04:30,770 --> 00:04:36,040 So there are real consequences to understanding what sleep is 86 00:04:36,064 --> 00:04:37,786 and how sleep is structured. 87 00:04:37,810 --> 00:04:42,066 And we'll learn all about the benefits of these different stages of sleep 88 00:04:42,090 --> 00:04:45,613 and the detriments that happen when we don't get enough of them 89 00:04:45,637 --> 00:04:47,277 in subsequent episodes.