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Home Research/How to do it

The Underslept Brain: Unveiling the Biological Mystery of Sleep Deprivation

Paul Balo by Paul Balo
October 7, 2016
in Research/How to do it, Science
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The importance of sleep cannot be overstated or downplayed. After all, sleep is the solvent that dissolves the weariness of the day, reviving us and refreshing our mental faculties for yet another day’s toil. Whenever we awaken from a good night’s sleep, we often feel recharged and ready to take on whatever comes our way. This rejuvenation is not unlike a computer system reboot, clearing out the cobwebs and replenishing our mental and physical stamina.

But here’s an intriguing question: Why is it that after a sleepless night, lethargy kicks in, but as the morning light penetrates your blinds around 6-7 A.M, you’re hit by a burst of energy that makes you feel ready to conquer the day? Why doesn’t the lack of sleep render us exponentially more fatigued with each passing hour?

Sleep reporter Sarah DiGiulio from The Huffington Post delves into this mystery and comes up with fascinating findings. It appears that our brain has multiple internal clocks, otherwise known as circadian rhythms, which play a crucial role in our sleep patterns.

Scientists have suspected for a long time that our brains follow a natural circadian rhythm. It’s thought to be what alerts our body as the sun rises, nudging us to wake up. The recent findings strongly support this theory.

MRI scans of brain activity in a group of adults who had stayed awake the entire night revealed that sleepiness was connected to two factors: the total duration of wakefulness and the circadian rhythm, the body’s internal clock which cues us to feel alert during sunrise and tired as dusk falls.

Going deeper, they found that different areas of the brain reacted to these factors differently and at variable times. Some areas took stronger cues from the fact of how long they stayed awake while others rested their decisions on the time displayed by the internal clock.

Study co-author Pierre Maquet, a sleep researcher at Belgium’s University of Liège, shares, “This is the first time there is evidence that we have multiple brain clocks.” This intriguing fact triggers seismic waves of surprise, partly upending previously established notions.

Sleep drive is another facet of our sleep patterns. It’s the accumulating urge to sleep that we experience with each hour that we stay awake. Think of it like an hourglass that compels us to sleep as sand trickles from one end to the other, and cues us to wake up as it’s flipped over.

This urge to sleep is not driven by the sleep drive alone. The body also follows a natural circadian rhythm, an approximate 24-hour cycle that makes us feel sleepier between roughly 2 and 4 a.m. and again between 1 and 3 p.m.

To understand how these factors interact, researchers kept thirty-three adults awake for 42 straight hours and subjected them to MRI scans and cognitive tests after a 12-hour recovery sleep. They discovered that brain activity, indicated by blood flow, fluctuated according to the circadian rhythm in some areas and in response to sleep drive in others.

“For 16 to 18 hours, your cognitive performance stays fairly constant,” Maquet  said. However, if you keep going throughout the night, your performance will noticeably drop, reaching its minimum around 4 to 6 a.m.

As irony would have it, different portions of the brain follow their own schedule. While some of them adhere to the expected circadian structure, others are far more affected by the accumulation of sleep debt.

“This changes our understanding of how spending more waking hours affects the brain and specific brain functions,” stated Maquet. This breakthrough research could potentially redefine our understanding of the effects of shift work, jet lag, sleep disorders, and aging on our cognitive functioning.

Furthermore, the research may open new diagnostic avenues for sleep disorders, a realm of conditions notoriously tricky to distinguish from disorders with similar symptoms, such as ADHD. Charles Czeisler, chief of the division of sleep and circadian disorders at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, views this study as a pioneering effort and comments, “It opens up a new era in the quantitative assessment of sleep-wake neurobiology.”

Evidently, while this research may not hold the keys to an all-nighter devoid of sleep-induced hangover, it uncovers an entirely new way to explore and understand the intricacies of our bodies’ sleep regulation systems. More importantly, it underscores the importance of sleep in keeping our cognitive functions, our attention span, and overall health optimal.

For more insights into this topic, please visit [here](http://www.huffingtonpost.com/author/sarah-digiulio).

*This article was updated in 2025 to reflect modern realities.*

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Paul Balo

Paul Balo

Paul Balo is the founder of TechBooky and a highly skilled wireless communications professional with a strong background in cloud computing, offering extensive experience in designing, implementing, and managing wireless communication systems.

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