Question:
Why do we actually sleep?
anonymous
2008-07-19 14:01:35 UTC
What is the biological need that makes us sleep ?
What actions take place when we sleep, is there something our body does?
What about our mentality and consiousness ? Can we save all the information we get like when awake? For example, when we hear someone talking do we always save it in our memory and we can recall it at some other time?
Are we thinking enough to judge something while sleeping or do we only feel what our instict orders?
What is the thing that makes you stop sleeping and not able to sleep for any more time at that day ?
Thirteen answers:
anonymous
2008-07-19 14:12:49 UTC
Your sleep cycle starts with the release of the hormone melatonin in the brain (the pituitary or master gland), which signals your body to release other hormones into the muscles to prepare you for relaxation. We can't function well without proper sleep because that is the crucial time the body needs to repair itself, as well as to shut your brain down, exept for rudimentary functions (deep sleep uses almost no energy). During the sleep cycle REM sleep is where you dream, and you bounce between REM and level 2-3-4 every hour and a half or so, which is why folks report sometimes remembering, although it is a hazy recollection, more than one dream. All information is stored, it is a question of which memory bank information is "deposited" in, short or long term. We are aware of outside influences in REM sleep or stage two, for example, a portion of our dream may involve a Tv program, if the set was left on while asleep. Interesting shtuff!
?
2016-05-26 08:56:49 UTC
I really feel sorry for you, it must be awful. I don't know if I can help. One suggestion would be to have "an electronic sundown" where you gradually turn off lights and technology (especially your bright computer screen) to mimic a natural sunset going into night. Whatever you do, stay off the computer in the evenings because the light will waken up your brain. Also, it is very hard not to keep thinking stuff and even when you try to do relaxation techniques you still think about the progression of it over your body. Perhaps you could just try listening and see if you can hear air molecules against your eardrum, and just ignore other noises. I hope you find help, soon. There are some natural herbs you can buy in pill form that may assist.
LineQ
2008-07-19 14:16:51 UTC
Researchers are still trying to figure out why we sleep. So far there are different theories on why we sleep. Some say it as way for the body to rejuvenate itself. Researchers have done studies where animals that were deprive of sleep became ill and eventually died. So sleep is needed for us to keep a healthy immune system and to prevent death. As far as your other questions, researchers are also asking these same questions but no concrete evidence or assumptions on what goes on while we are sleeping. But I am sure there have been many that have tried to speculate. You will have to do your own research and pick and choose what makes the most sense to you. Nevertheless, all humans have a circadian rhythm located in their brains. It regulates when you sleep and when you wake up. So obviously the body is set up biologically for you to sleep. Trust your body to get some rest every night. And besides, a good night rest is needed for good health. Those who deprive themselves from sleep often do get more diseases and health problems as many researchers have seen in animals deprived from sleep in laboratories during experiments.
Lauren!
2008-07-19 14:06:58 UTC
The Brain cant function without sleep,

Thats why people with certain brain disorders die because a human needs to rest it for hours during night hours.

Our body shuts down all of our thoughts,

And doesnt use as much power as it does during the day.

Even though we dont rememeber,we can still hear and feel everything around us.

And,we stop sleeping when our brain has had enough rest.



=D
anonymous
2008-07-19 14:13:36 UTC
I don't have all the solutions to your questions however, what I know about sleep is that it depends on are circadian rhythms and every ones is different. Also, are body heals itself when we sleep like when we are sick. I believe that it depends on the state of conciousness that you are in in order to process and retain information of meomories. There are no instincts in humans only infants. There is no thing that makes us stop sleeping other than are mind.
zombie
2008-07-19 14:14:13 UTC
stress prevents you from sleeping



our memory is built on indexing...u look at someone's chef hat and then it reminds you of bread and then the thought that you don't have milk for the cereals and that takes you to the last time you went to the store for buying cereals with your ex which leads to the thought about that dating site you wanted to try or would you still find that girl you had a crush @ school and.....



all this info is saved in our head, the re-call is based on the trigger....



when we are asleep, our body is still alert to the outside reality...



mhmm.... i have been thinking about it for quite some time now...

its 3 AM, i think i would go to sleep now...
anonymous
2008-07-19 14:08:33 UTC
No human knows why.There are only theories on why we sleep which are really useless.My theory is to "cool off our circuits".
nethnee
2008-07-19 14:06:04 UTC
you rest the body and the mind when you sleep
anonymous
2008-07-19 14:05:20 UTC
too make you grow

if you dont need to grow any more

stuff it :D your an adult do wot ya like!
anonymous
2008-07-19 14:11:02 UTC
....Who says I sleep? *looks side to side*

















https://answersrip.com/question/index?qid=20080719133511AANlaLJ
da balla 22
2008-07-19 14:04:42 UTC
it wastes time
RTH23
2008-07-19 14:03:45 UTC
so you arent tired
Tabbytiger
2008-07-19 14:10:38 UTC
Restoration



Wound healing has been shown to be affected by sleep. A study conducted by Gumustekin et al.[18] in 2004 shows sleep deprivation hindering the healing of burns on rats.



It has also been shown that sleep deprivation affects the immune system and metabolism. In a study by Zager et al in 2007,[19] rats were deprived of sleep for 24 hours. When compared with a control group, the sleep-deprived rats' blood tests indicated a 20% decrease in white blood cell count, a significant change in the immune system.



A study by Bonnet and Arand[20] in 2003 indicates that sleep affects metabolism. Comparing normal human sleepers and sleepers with sleep state misperception insomnia, where patients complain of poor sleep but have normal sleep by electroencephalographic (EEG) criteria, the researchers found significantly greater metabolism values for the normal sleepers.



It has yet to be clearly proven that sleep duration affects somatic growth. One study by Jenni et al[21] in 2007 recorded growth, height and weight, as correlated to parent-reported time-in-bed in 305 children over a period of nine years (age 1-10). It was found that "the variation of sleep duration among children does not seem to have an effect on growth". It has been shown that sleep, more specifically slow-wave sleep (SWS), does affect growth hormone levels in adult men. During eight hours sleep, Van Cauter, Leproult, and Plat[22] found that the men with a high percentage of SWS (average 24%) also had high growth hormone secretion, while subjects with a low percentage of SWS (average 9%) had low growth hormone secretion.



There are multiple arguments supporting the restorative function of sleep. We feel rested after sleeping, and it is natural to assume that this is a basic purpose of sleep. Overall metabolic rate goes down during sleep and certain anabolic hormones such as growth hormones as mentioned above are secreted preferentially during sleep. Sleep among species is, in general, inversely related to the animal size and basal metabolic rate. Rats with a very high basal metabolic rate sleep for up to 14 hours a day whereas elephants and giraffes with lower BMRs sleep only 3-4 hours per day.



Energy conservation could as well have been accomplished by resting quiescent without shutting off the organism from the environment, potentially a dangerous situation. A sedentary non-sleeping animal is more likely to survive predators, while still preserving energy. Sleep therefore does something else other than conserving energy. Most interestingly, hibernating animals that wake up from hibernation go into rebound sleep because of lack of sleep during the hibernation period. They are definitely well rested and are conserving energy during hibernation, but need sleep for something else.[23] One study that was conducted kept rats awake indefinitely. They started dying after five days.[citation needed]



[edit] Anabolic/catabolic



Non-REM sleep may be an anabolic state marked by physiological processes of growth and rejuvenation of the organism's immune, nervous, muscular, and skeletal systems (but see above). Wakefulness may perhaps be viewed as a cyclical, temporary, hyperactive catabolic state during which the organism acquires nourishment and procreates.



[edit] Ontogenesis



According to the ontogenetic hypothesis of REM sleep, the activity occurring during neonatal REM sleep (or active sleep) seems to be particularly important to the developing organism (Marks et al., 1995). Studies investigating the effects of deprivation of active sleep have shown that deprivation early in life can result in behavioral problems, permanent sleep disruption, decreased brain mass (Mirmiran et al. 1983), and an abnormal amount of neuronal cell death (Morrissey, Duntley & Anch, 2004).



REM sleep appears to be important for development of the brain. REM sleep occupies majority of time of sleep of infants, which spend most of their time sleeping. Among different species, the more immature the baby is born, the more time it spends in REM sleep. Proponents also suggest that REM-induced muscle inhibition in the presence of brain activation exists to allow for brain development by activating the synapses yet without any motor consequences which may get the infant in trouble. Additionally, REM deprivation results in developmental abnormalities later in life.



However, this does not explain why older adults still need REM sleep, and why the fraction of time spent does not change significantly[citation needed] as one ages. Aquatic mammal infants do not have REM sleep in infancy. REM sleep in those animals increases as they age. Obviously, REM sleep is not needed for development in these animals.



[edit] Memory processing



Scientists have shown numerous ways in which sleep is related to memory. In a study conducted by Turner, Drummond, Salamat, and Brown[24] working memory was shown to be affected by sleep deprivation. Working memory is important because it keeps information active for further processing and supports higher-level cognitive functions such as decision making, reasoning, and episodic memory. Turner et al. allowed 18 women and 22 men to sleep only 26 minutes per night over a 4-day period. Subjects were given initial cognitive tests while well rested and then tested again twice a day during the 4 days of sleep deprivation. On the final test the average working memory span of the sleep deprived group had dropped by 38% in comparison to the control group.



Memory also seems to be affected differently by certain stages of sleep such as REM and slow-wave sleep (SWS). In one study cited in Born, Rasch, and Gais[25] multiple groups of human subjects were used: wake control groups and sleep test groups. Sleep and wake groups were taught a task and then tested on it both on early and late nights, with the order of nights balanced across participants. When the subjects' brains were scanned during sleep, hypnograms revealed that SWS was the dominant sleep stage during the early night representing around 23% on average for sleep stage activity. The early night test group performed 16% better on the declarative memory test than the control group. During late night sleep, REM became the most active sleep stage at about 24%, and the late night test group performed 25% better on the procedural memory test than the control group. This indicates that procedural memory benefits from late REM-rich sleep whereas declarative memory benefits from early SWS-rich sleep.



Another study conducted by Datta[26] indirectly supports these results. The subjects chosen were 22 male rats. A box was constructed where a single rat could move freely from one end to the other. The bottom of the box was made of a steel grate. A light would shine in the box accompanied by a sound. After a 5 second delay an electrical shock would be applied. Once the shock commenced the rat could move to the other end of the box, ending the shock immediately. The rat could also use the 5-second delay to move to the other end of the box and avoid the shock entirely. The length of the shock never exceeded 5 seconds. This was repeated 30 times for half the rats. The other half, the control group, was placed in the same trial but the rats were shocked regardless of their reaction. After each of the training sessions the rat would be placed in a recording cage for 6 hours of polygraphic recordings. This process was repeated for 3 consecutive days. This study found that during the post-trial sleep recording session rats spent 25.47% more time in REM sleep after learning trials than after control trials. These trials support the results of the Born et al. study, indicating an obvious correlation between REM sleep and procedural knowledge.



Another interesting observation of the Datta study is that the learning group spent 180% more time in SWS than did the control group during the post-trial sleep-recording session. This phenomenon is supported by a study performed by Kudrimoti, Barnes, and McNaughton.[27] This study shows that after spatial exploration activity, patterns of hippocampal place cells are reactivated during SWS following the experiment. In a study by Kudrimoti et al. seven rats were run through a linear track using rewards on either end. The rats would then be placed in the track for 30 minutes to allow them to adjust (PRE), then they ran the track with reward based training for 30 minutes (RUN), and then they were allowed to rest for 30 minutes. During each of these three periods EEG data were collected for information on the rats’ sleep stages. Kudrimoti et al. computed the mean firing rates of hippocampal place cells during pre-behavior SWS (PRE) and three 10-minute intervals in post-behavior SWS (POST) by averaging across 22 track-running sessions from seven rats. The results showed that 10 minutes after the trial RUN session there was a 12% increase in the mean firing rate of hippocampal place cells from the PRE level, however after 20 minutes the mean firing rate returned rapidly toward the PRE level. The elevated firing of hippocampal place cells during SWS after spatial exploration could explain why there were elevated levels of SWS sleep in Datta’s study as it also dealt with a form of spatial exploration.



The different studies all suggest that there is a correlation between sleep and the many complex functions of memory.



Further information: Sleep and learning, Sleep and creativity



[edit] Preservation



The "Preservation and Protection" theory holds that sleep serves an adaptive function. It protects the person during that portion of the 24-hour day in which being awake, and hence roaming around, would place the individual at greatest risk. Organisms do not require 24 hours to feed themselves and meet other necessities. From this perspective of adaptation, organisms are safer by staying out of harm's way where potential


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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