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The brain benefits of deep sleep -- and how to get more of it

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    What if you could make
    your sleep more efficient?
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    As a sleep scientist,
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    this is the question
    that has captivated me
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    for the past 10 years.
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    Because while the lightbulb
    and technology have brought about a world
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    of 24-hour work and productivity,
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    it has come at the cost
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    of our naturally occurring
    circadian rhythm
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    and our body's need for sleep.
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    The circadian rhythm dictates
    our energy level throughout the day,
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    and only recently we've been conducting
    a global experiment on this rhythm,
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    which is putting our sleep health
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    and ultimately
    our life quality in jeopardy.
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    Because of this,
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    we aren't getting the sleep we need,
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    with the average American
    sleeping a whole hour less
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    than they did in the 1940s.
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    For some reason,
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    we decided to wear it as a badge of honor
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    that we can get by on not enough sleep.
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    This all adds up to a real health crisis.
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    Most of us know that poor sleep
    is linked to diseases
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    like Alzheimer's, cadriovascular disease,
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    stroke and diabetes.
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    And if you go untreated
    with a sleep disorder
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    like sleep apnea,
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    you're more likely to get
    many of these illnesses.
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    But did you know about sleep's impact
    on your mental states?
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    Poor sleep makes us
    make risky, rash decisions,
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    and is a drain on our
    capacity for empathy.
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    When sleep deprivation literally makes us
    more sensitive to our own pain,
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    it's not so surpirsing that we have
    a hard time relating to others
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    and just generally being
    a good and healthy person
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    when we're sleep deprived.
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    Scientists are now starting to understand
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    how not only the quantity but also
    the quality of sleep impacts our health
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    and well-being.
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    My research focuses
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    on what many scientists believe
    is the most regenerative stage of sleep:
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    deep sleep.
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    We now know that generally speaking,
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    there are three stages of sleep:
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    light sleep,
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    rapid eye movement or REM,
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    and deep sleep.
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    We measure these stages by connecting
    electrodes to the scalp, chin and chest.
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    In light sleep and REM,
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    our brain waves are very similar
    to our brain waves in waking life.
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    But our brain waves in deep sleep
    have these long-burst brain waves
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    that are very different
    from our waking life brain waves.
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    These long-burst brain waves
    are called delta waves.
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    When we don't get the deep sleep we need,
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    it inhibits our ability to learn
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    and for our cells and bodies to recover.
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    Deep sleep is how we convert
    all those interactions
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    that we make during the day
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    into our long-term memory
    and personalities.
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    As we get older,
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    we're more likely to lose
    these regenerative delta waves.
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    So in way,
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    deep sleep and delta waves
    are actually a marker
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    for biological youth.
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    So naturally, I wanted to get
    more deep sleep for myself,
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    and I literally tried almost every gadget,
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    gizmo, device and hack out there --
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    consumer-grade, clinical-grade,
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    what have you.
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    I learned a lot,
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    and I found I really do need --
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    like most people --
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    eight hours of sleep.
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    I even shifted my circadian component
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    by changing my meals,
    exercise and light exposure,
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    but I still couldn't find a way
    to get a deeper night of sleep ...
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    that is until I met
    Dr. Dmitry Gerashchenko
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    from Harvard Medical School.
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    Dmitry told me about
    a new finding in the literature,
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    where a lab out of Germany showed
    that if you could play certain sounds
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    at the right time in people's sleep,
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    you could actually make sleep
    deeper and more efficient.
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    And what's more,
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    is that this lab showed
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    that you actually could improve
    next-day memory performance
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    with this sound.
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    Dmitry and I teamed up,
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    and we began working on a way
    to build this technology.
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    WIth our research lab
    collaborators at Penn State,
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    we designed experiments
    in order to validate our system.
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    And we've since received grant funding
    from the National Science Foundation
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    and the National Institute of Health
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    to develop this deep-sleep
    stimulation technology.
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    Here's how it works.
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    People came into the lab
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    and we hooked them up
    to a number of devices,
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    two of which I have on right here --
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    not a fashion statement.
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    (Laughter)
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    When we detected that people
    were in deep sleep,
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    we played the deep-sleep
    stimulating sounds
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    that were shown to make them
    have deeper sleep.
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    I'm going to demo this sound
    for you right now.
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    (Waves crash)
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    Pretty weird, right?
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    (Laughter)
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    So that sound is actually at the same
    burst frequency as your brain waves
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    when your brain is in deep sleep.
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    That sound pattern
    actually primes your mind
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    to have more of these
    regenerative delta waves.
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    When we asked participants
    the next day about the sounds,
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    they were completely unaware
    that we played the sounds,
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    yet their brains responded
    with more of these delta waves.
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    Here's an image of someone's brain waves
    from the study that we conducted.
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    See the bottom panel?
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    This shows the sound being played
    at that burst frequenecy.
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    Now look at the brain waves
    in the upper part of the graph.
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    You can see from the graph
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    that the sound is actually producing
    more of these regenerative delta waves.
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    We learned that we could
    accurately track sleep
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    without hooking people up to electrodes,
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    and make people sleep deeper.
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    We're continuing to develop
    the right sound environment
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    and sleep habitat to improve
    people's sleep health.
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    Our sleep isn't as regenerative
    as it could be,
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    but maybe one day soon,
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    we could wear a small device,
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    and get more out of our sleep.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The brain benefits of deep sleep -- and how to get more of it
Speaker:
Dan Gartenberg
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
06:37

English subtitles

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