Sleep - a physical and mental
resting state where a person
becomes inactive and unaware
of the environment
Restoration theory
Oswald (1966) believed that the function
of sleep was to re-group our resources
after expending them during the day
believed that REM was important
for brain growth, and SWS was
important for bodily growth
during the first year babies sleep
18/24 hours; age 5 an adult circadian
pattern is established, may be due to
environmental and maturation factors
newborn infants spend half the 18 hours in
REM, adults spend 1/4 of the 18 hours in
REM; babies have to grow more
Sassin (1969) found that
when sleep-waking cycles are
reversed by 12 hours, the
release of GH is also reversed
also suggested that sleep is an important way of
conserving neurotransmitters; through the day, the
amount of neurotransmitters in our bodies decreases;
REM sleep replenishes neurotransmitters
Stickgold (2005) - REM important in the
consolidation of procedural memory,
SWS important for the consolidation of
semonic and episodic memory
Jouvet (1967) - when a cat went into REM sleep
it's skeletal muscles relaxed, leading it to fall into
the water, waking it up; the more deprived of
REM sleep the cat was, the more attempts it
made to enter REM; the cat eventually died
REM is necessary
for adequate brain
functioning
however, cat
could've died
from stress
DJ Peter Tripp - stayed
awake for 201 hours;
started hallucinating and
getting paranoid
Randy Gardner - stayed
awake for 260 hours;
displayed no significant
psychotic symptoms
however, Randy
would've had
microsleeps (same
as normal sleep)
Lavie (1984) studied a 20 y.o whose
head was injured by shrapnel; no
REM and this had no ill effects
Evolutionary theory
Energy conservation
warm-blooded animals
need to expend a lot of
energy to maintain a
constant body temperature
all activities use
energy and animals
with high metabolic
rates use even more
hibernation theory
sleep serves a purpose
of providing a period of
enforced inactivity
(using less energy)
however, Capellini (2008)
found a negative relationship
between metabolic rate and
sleep; doesn't support the
energy conservation theory
Predator avoidance
sleep is
constrained by
predation risk
predators can 'afford'
to sleep for longer
prey species must
remain vigilant so their
sleep time is reduced
Waste of time
Meddis (1975) - sleep may simply
ensure that animals stay still when
they have nothing better to do
Siegel (2008) - being
awake may be more riskier
than sleeping as an animal
could get injured