Bats, birds, box turtles, humans and many other animals share at
least one thing in common: They sleep. Humans, in fact, spend roughly
one-third of their lives asleep, but sleep researchers still don't know
why.
According to the journal Science, the function of sleep is
one of the 125 greatest unsolved mysteries in science. Theories range
from brain "maintenance" — including memory consolidation and pruning —
to reversing damage from oxidative stress suffered while awake, to
promoting longevity. None of these theories are well established, and
many are mutually exclusive.
Now, a new analysis by Jerome
Siegel, UCLA professor of psychiatry and director of the Center for
Sleep Research at the Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human
Behavior at UCLA and the Sepulveda Veterans Affairs Medical Center, has
concluded that sleep's primary function is to increase animals'
efficiency and minimize their risk by regulating the duration and
timing of their behavior.
The research appears in the current online edition of the journal Nature Reviews Neuroscience.
"Sleep
has normally been viewed as something negative for survival because
sleeping animals may be vulnerable to predation and they can't perform
the behaviors that ensure survival," Siegel said. These behaviors
include eating, procreating, caring for family members, monitoring the
environment for danger and scouting for prey.
"So it's been
thought that sleep must serve some as-yet unidentified physiological or
neural function that can't be accomplished when animals are awake," he
said.
Siegel's lab conducted a new survey of the sleep times of
a broad range of animals, examining everything from the platypus and
the walrus to the echidna, a small, burrowing, egg-laying mammal
covered in spines. The researchers concluded that sleep itself is
highly adaptive, much like the inactive states seen in a wide range of
species, starting with plants and simple microorganisms; these species
have dormant states — as opposed to sleep — even though in many cases
they do not have nervous systems. That challenges the idea that sleep
is for the brain, said Siegel.
"We see sleep as lying on a
continuum that ranges from these dormant states like torpor and
hibernation, on to periods of continuous activity without any sleep,
such as during migration, where birds can fly for days on end without
stopping," he said.
Hibernation is one example of an activity
that regulates behavior for survival. A small animal, Siegel noted,
can't migrate to a warmer climate in winter. So it hibernates,
effectively cutting its energy consumption and thus its need for food,
remaining secure from predators by burrowing underground.
Sleep
duration, then, is determined in each species by the time requirements
of eating, the cost-benefit relations between activity and risk,
migration needs, care of young, and other factors. However, unlike
hibernation and torpor, Siegel said, sleep is rapidly reversible — that
is, animals can wake up quickly, a unique mammalian adaptation that
allows for a relatively quick response to sensory signals.
Humans
fit into this analysis as well. What is most remarkable about sleep,
according to Siegel, is not the unresponsiveness or vulnerability it
creates but rather that ability to reduce body and brain metabolism
while still allowing that high level of responsiveness to the
environment.
"The often cited example is that of a parent
arousing at a baby's whimper but sleeping through a thunderstorm," he
said. "That dramatizes the ability of the sleeping human brain to
continuously process sensory signals and trigger complete awakening to
significant stimuli within a few hundred milliseconds."
In
humans, the brain constitutes, on average, just 2 percent of total body
weight but consumes 20 percent of the energy used during quiet waking,
so these savings have considerable adaptive significance. Besides
conserving energy, sleep invokes survival benefits for humans too —
"for example," said Siegel, "a reduced risk of injury, reduced resource
consumption and, from an evolutionary standpoint, reduced risk of
detection by predators."
"This Darwinian perspective can
explain age-related changes in human sleep patterns as well," he said.
"We sleep more deeply when we are young, because we have a high
metabolic rate that is greatly reduced during sleep, but also because
there are people to protect us. Our sleep patterns change when we are
older, though, because that metabolic rate reduces and we are now the
ones doing the alerting and protecting from dangers."
The
Center for Sleep Research is part of the Semel Institute for
Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA, an interdisciplinary research
and education institute devoted to the understanding of complex human
behavior, including the genetic, biological, behavioral and
sociocultural underpinnings of normal behavior, and the causes and
consequences of neuropsychiatric disorders.
Wild Life News
China News
HEALTH NEWS
Why Sleep?
This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always
been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such
material available in our efforts to advance understanding of
environmental, political, human rights, economic, democracy,
scientific, and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes
a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material. If you wish to use
copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go
beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
Disclaimer