A walk through the stages of sleep Sleeping with Science a TED series

Sleep is perhaps the
single most effective thing

that we can do each and every day

to reset the health
of our brain and our body.

And by understanding a little bit more
about what sleep is,

perhaps we can get the chance to improve
both the quantity and the quality

of our sleep.

[Sleeping with Science]

(Music)

So, exactly what is sleep?

Well, sleep, at least in human beings,

is subdivided into two main types.

On the one hand, we have
non-rapid eye movement sleep,

or non-REM sleep for short.

But on the other hand,

we have rapid eye movement
sleep, or REM sleep.

And non-REM sleep has been
further subdivided

into four separate stages,

unimaginatively called
stages one through four,

increasing in their depth of sleep.

And as we go into those light stages
of non-REM sleep,

your heart rate starts to decrease,

your body temperature starts to drop

and your electrical brain wave activity
starts to slow down.

But as we move into deeper
non-rapid eye movement sleep,

stages three and four,

now all of a sudden the brain erupts

with these huge, big,
powerful brain waves.

The body is actually recharged
in terms of its immune system.

We also get this beautiful overhaul
of our cardiovascular system.

And, in fact, upstairs in the brain,

deep non-REM sleep
will help consolidate memories

and fixate them into the neural
architecture of the brain.

So that’s non-REM sleep.

But let’s come on to REM sleep,

which is the other main type of sleep.

And it’s during REM sleep
when we principally have the most vivid,

the most hallucinogenic types of dreams.

The brain wave activity
actually starts to speed up again.

It’s during REM sleep that we receive
almost a form of emotional first aid.

And it’s also during REM sleep
where we get a boost for creativity,

that it stitches information together

so that we wake up with solutions

to previously difficult problems
that we were facing.

Coming back to these two types of sleep,

it turns out that non-REM
and REM will play out

in a battle for brain domination
throughout the night,

and that cerebral war
is going to be won and lost

every 90 minutes,

and then it’s going to be
replayed every 90 minutes.

And what this produces is a standard
cycling architecture of human sleep,

a standard 90-minute cycle.

But what’s different, however,

is that the ratio of non-REM to REM
within those 90-minute cycles

changes as we move across the night,

such that in the first half the night,

the majority of those 90-minute cycles

are comprised of lots
of deep non-REM sleep,

particularly stages three and four
of non-REM sleep.

But as we push through
to the second half of the night,

now that seesaw balance
actually shifts over,

and instead, most of those
90-minute cycles

are comprised of a lot more
rapid eye movement sleep, or dream sleep,

as well as stage-two non-REM sleep,

that lighter form of non-REM sleep.

And it turns out
that there are implications

for understanding how sleep
is structured in this way.

Let’s take someone who typically
goes to bed at 10pm,

and they wake up at 6am,

so they have an eight-hour sleep window.

But this morning,
they have to wake up early

for an early morning meeting,

or they want to get
a jump start on the day

to get to the gym.

And as a consequence, they have to wake up
at 4am in the morning,

rather than 6am in the morning.

How much sleep have they actually lost?

Two hours out of
an eight-hour night of sleep

means that they’ve lost
25 percent of their sleep.

Well, yes and no.

They have lost 25 percent
of all of their sleep,

but because REM sleep comes
mostly in the second half of the night

and particularly in those last few hours,

they may have lost perhaps
50, 60, maybe even 70 percent

of all of their REM sleep.

So there are real consequences
to understanding what sleep is

and how sleep is structured.

And we’ll learn all about the benefits
of these different stages of sleep

and the detriments that happen
when we don’t get enough of them

in subsequent episodes.

睡眠也许

是我们每天可以做的最有效的事情,

以重置
我们的大脑和身体的健康。

通过更多地
了解睡眠是什么,

也许我们可以有机会
改善睡眠的数量和

质量。

[Sleeping with Science]

(音乐)

那么,究竟什么是睡眠?

嗯,睡眠,至少在人类中,

被细分为两种主要类型。

一方面,我们有
非快速眼动睡眠,简称非快速眼动睡眠

但另一方面,

我们有快速眼动
睡眠或快速眼动睡眠。

非快速眼动睡眠被
进一步细分

为四个独立的阶段,

难以想象地称为第一
阶段到第四阶段,

它们的睡眠深度不断增加。

当我们进入
非快速眼动睡眠的轻度阶段时,

你的心率开始下降,

你的体温开始下降

,你的脑电波活动
开始减慢。

但是当我们进入更深层次的
非快速眼动睡眠

阶段,即第三和第四阶段时,

现在大脑突然爆发

出这些巨大的、巨大的、
强大的脑电波。

身体实际上
在免疫系统方面得到了充电。

我们还
对我们的心血管系统进行了这项美丽的大修。

而且,事实上,在大脑的上层,

深度非快速眼动睡眠
将有助于巩固记忆

并将它们固定
在大脑的神经结构中。

这就是非快速眼动睡眠。

但是让我们来看看 REM 睡眠,

这是另一种主要的睡眠类型。

在快速眼动睡眠
期间,我们主要做最生动

、最致幻的梦。

脑电波活动
实际上又开始加速了。

在快速眼动睡眠期间,我们
几乎接受了一种情绪急救。

而且在快速眼动睡眠期间
,我们的创造力得到了提升

,它将信息缝合在一起,

这样我们醒来时就可以

解决以前面临的困难问题

回到这两种睡眠,

事实证明,非快速眼动
和快速眼动将

在整个晚上展开一场争夺大脑控制权的战斗

而大脑战争

每 90 分钟就会输赢一次,

然后就开始了
每 90 分钟重播一次。

这产生
了人类睡眠的标准循环结构,

一个标准的 90 分钟循环。

但不同的

是,在这 90 分钟周期内,非快速眼动与快速眼动的比率

会随着我们在夜间移动而发生变化,

因此在

前半夜,这 90 分钟周期中的大部分

是由 大量
的深度非快速眼动睡眠,特别是非快速眼动睡眠的

第三和第四阶段

但是当我们推进到

下半夜时,现在跷跷板的平衡
实际上发生了变化

,相反,这些
90 分钟的周期

中的大部分都由更
快速的眼动睡眠或梦睡眠

以及阶段 - 两种非快速眼动睡眠,

即较轻的非快速眼动睡眠形式。

事实证明

对于理解睡眠
是如何以这种方式构成的,是有意义的。

让我们以一个通常
在晚上 10 点上床睡觉,

早上 6 点起床的人为例,

所以他们有 8 小时的睡眠窗口。

但是今天早上,
他们必须早起去

参加晨会,

或者他们想
在一天

中快速开始去健身房。

因此,他们必须
在凌晨 4 点起床,

而不是早上 6 点。

他们实际上失去了多少睡眠?

每晚八小时睡眠中的两个小时

意味着他们失去了
25% 的睡眠。

嗯,是的,也不是。

他们已经失去了 25
% 的睡眠,

但由于 REM 睡眠
主要发生在后半夜

,尤其是在最后几个小时,

他们可能失去了
50%、60% 甚至 70

% 的 REM 睡觉。

因此
,了解什么是睡眠

以及睡眠是如何构成的会产生真正的影响。

我们将了解
这些不同睡眠阶段的所有好处,

以及
当我们在随后的剧集中没有得到足够多的睡眠时会发生的坏处