States that scientists still can't say exactly what happens when we
begin to fall asleep, but once they figure it out, they may be able to
offer concrete help to the 30 to 35 percent of people who suffer from
insomnia. Comments from John Harsh of the University of Southern
Mississippi; Additional information.
By
PT Staff, published on May 01, 1993
SLEEP TRANSITION
You climb into bed at the end of a long day. Your head hits the
pillow, you close your eyes, and you:
o Fall immediately asleep?
o Lie there tossing and turning?
o Jump awake as a thought or image flashes in your mind?
If it's any comfort to you, scientists still can't say exactly what
happens when we begin to nod off. But once they figure it out, they may
be able to offer concrete help to the 30 to 35 percent of people who
suffer from insomnia.
Researchers representing some 26 different sleep labs will pm-sent
their pat theories on so-called sleep transition at a conference this
summer. John Harsh, Ph.D., of the University of Southern Mississippi, for
one, is focusing on sleep apnea. While it's long been known that the lack
of oxygen the condition produces can sometimes wake us up, more often it
causes a transition from a deeper to a lighter stage of sleep, often
hundreds of times a night. That, Harsh believes, may provide further
clues as to what goes on when we try to sleep.
Once thought of as a "switch being thrown" from wakefulness to
sleep, sleep onset is now seen as is now seen as a phase in which we
continue processing a great deal of information--as we do during sleep
itself, though to a lesser degree. We are much more active than
previously recognized--for example, we respond to names (especially our
own), and to other info such as room termperature.
There is even what Harsh calls "situation-specific receptivity." A
new mother, for example, might be especially sensitive to her baby's cry
while father might awaken in response to the sounds of a prowler.
Though interest in sleep has boomed recently, the subject of sleep
transition is just beginning to see the light of day.
PHOTO: Depiction of someone sleeping.
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