Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Unravelling the process of going to sleep

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Nov, 2014 12:17 PM
  • Unravelling the process of going to sleep
Sleeping is a gradual process and researchers have now developed a method to estimate the dynamic changes in brain activity and behaviour during the transition from wakefulness to sleep.
 
The research could lead to new treatment for sleep disorders.
 
"We now have the power to chart the entire trajectory of your neurological, physiological and behavioural activity as you transition from wake to asleep, rather than simply reporting the time it takes," said lead study author Michael Prerau from the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) in the US.
 
Current clinical criteria define sleep as beginning when the power of an individual's alpha-range brain waves disappear.
 
The new study established that increasing power in two other brain waves - delta and theta frequencies - point towards the change in behaviour during the transition from wakefulness to sleep.
 
"These results suggest that it is the presence of delta and theta power, rather than the lack of alpha power, that is necessary for the cessation of behaviour," Prerau added.
 
"We may need to carefully re-examine the way sleep onset is defined, since behaviour is an essential component of the story that is not measured clinically," Prerau said.
 
For the study participants were asked to hold a small rubber "stress ball" in one hand and squeeze the ball with every intake of breath and release it when exhaling.
 
The researchers found that two of the nine participants continued to correctly time their ball squeezes for several minutes after alpha levels had dropped.
 
Only when the power in their brain waves at the theta and delta frequencies had risen did both the behavioural and physiological measures indicate that they were asleep.
 
The findings appeared in the journal PLOS Computational Biology.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Young and obese? Blame it on sedentary lifestyle

Young and obese? Blame it on sedentary lifestyle
Cutting down on calories alone may not help you trim your bulging waistline as researchers have found that lack of leisure-time physical activity is linked to increased obesity, particularly in young women.

Young and obese? Blame it on sedentary lifestyle

Even electric shock can give you Neymar-like injury!

Even electric shock can give you Neymar-like injury!
Even as an on-field spinal injury keeps Brazil's star player Neymar Junior out of World Cup semifinal clash between Brazil and Germany Tuesday, experts say similar injuries are also common off the field.

Even electric shock can give you Neymar-like injury!

Fungus in Greek yoghurt serious health threat?

Fungus in Greek yoghurt serious health threat?
A fungus strain responsible for an outbreak of contaminated Greek yoghurt last year has the ability to cause serious gastrointestinal (GI) problems, according to new research.

Fungus in Greek yoghurt serious health threat?

Porn addiction may turn women into hypersexuals: Study

Porn addiction may turn women into hypersexuals: Study
Not just fantasies, but heavy porn viewing may make some women "hypersexual" - to have sex so frequently that it may cause them problems, a fascinating study reveals.

Porn addiction may turn women into hypersexuals: Study

More first-time moms surfing Google for pregnancy queries

More first-time moms surfing Google for pregnancy queries
The Google search engine has come to the rescue of would-be moms. According to researchers, more and more first-time mothers are using the internet to seek answers to their queries related to pregnancies.

More first-time moms surfing Google for pregnancy queries

Older women's eggs 'just as good'?

Older women's eggs 'just as good'?
An old hypothesis that claims that as a woman ages, the eggs she will produce will have more faulty chromosomes - leading to miscarriages and developmental abnormalities - does not hold much water, says a new research.

Older women's eggs 'just as good'?