This press release from two months ago resulted in BBC reporting that was extensively discussed here on HN back then.[1] (I remember this because I had a good night's sleep last night.) As usual for news stories about science discoveries, this is a report of a preliminary primary research finding that may or may not be replicated and extended into the framework of an overall theory of human sleep. The science news cycle gives a crucial role to press releases like the release kindly submitted here,[2] so all of us who sleep will look forward to further research studies to confirm or disconfirm this preliminary finding and help us understand how this mouse study relates to human behavior.
The obligatory link for any discussion of a report on a preliminary research result is the article "Warning Signs in Experimental Design and Interpretation"[3] by Peter Norvig, director of research at Google, on how to interpret scientific research. Considering carefully how the current research was done (after a good night's sleep, of course) may help suggest further research that will advance our understanding of what sleep is good for.
Maybe this already exists, bit I see a startup opportunity for tagging a study as "of interest" and having a site build a portfolio of information related to that study and finding new studies. Feedback could be given on the relevance of returned results.
Something like the app flipboard but have it contain dedicated magazines/journals that gather up and continually build out.
Not sure what it is with me, but if have no daily obligations and don't force my self to go to sleep at night, I always end up reversing my sleep schedule. Been that way even through high-school, summer vacation comes and I'm there watching tv or playing video games until 5-6am and then I crash and wake up for lunch at 1-2pm. Somehow, the peacefulness of the night is soothing, even my mind seams clearer. Also, sometimes my mind is racing, and I won't go to sleep even if my body is tired. Usually, at that time before crashing, I feel so close to having all the answers.
I used to behave like this, would go to bed between 2 and 5, despite not liking the consequences (shortened daylight time, city noise while I slept in, being out of sync with others). I think I've gradually fixed it. Still working on being more regular, but these days I'm able to fall asleep at 10h30. Here's what I think helped me personally:
- learning about mindfulness (useful to stop/slow down the intense flow of thoughts. I recommend reading/listening to The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle)
- 500 mcg of melatonin at the end of dinner. (the chewable ones sold at Trader Joe's work for me) Required read: http://www.gwern.net/Melatonin
During the transition, some days I may have forced myself to get up a little earlier so that I would go to bed earlier, it helped but I avoided doing this too often because it could affect my abilities for days. You want to sleep as much as you need but still go to bed at a reasonable time, not sleep deprive yourself to sleep. Setting your clock is a gradual thing. Maybe you can try to go to bed 15 min earlier every day.
EDIT: I'm not a doctor, and I didn't get help from a doctor for this. Take this advice at your own risk. But if you do get help from a doctor and you're offered a prescription for sleeping pills, please remember there may be healthier alternatives.
Being phsyically exhausted certainly helps. I was into hiking and spelunking and somehow in the mountains there is no need for an alarm clock, the sunrise just wakes you up. Also, there's a lack of stress and anxiety about work or what tomorrow holds, you sort of live in the now.
I know this is OT, and it's not caused by sleep deprivation, but does anyone know what NIH uses to generate their site. It seems simple and straightforward on the surface but a look at the source reveals it to be tight, templated, and well organized. Seems well designed and executed.
I'd not mind doing some self-experimentation with sleep, but I have a hard time drawing a line with when to stop and try to evaluate what the effect was. Changes might be so gradual as to not really being able to tell ("do I feel better now than before?"). I wish there were more objective measures for this sort of thing that didn't require a sizeable study population to be reliable. I guess we need more biomarkers for... sleep health?
And I only slept 3 hours tonight. However, I've came to master my sleep cycles. Had I slept 3.5 or 5 hours, I would be dead tired right now. I wonder if it's long enough for the brain to clears itself. I tend to sleep only a few hours all month, then I get tired once a month and sleep for around 12 to 14 hours and feel good for the next 30 days or so.
I'm probably killing myself. Or perhaps I've found the perfect sleep schedule for me.
>perhaps I've found the perfect sleep schedule for me.
I think that's the point we miss as a structured society: different sleep schedules for everyone. Personally I can't live without a 20 minute siesta every day, which remote work allows. I go crazy having to go to an office.
I used to work in a lab. I discovered napping with my head on the microscope. I had to work on positioning just right but it was fantastic for the 2pm doldrums.
I think it's important to remember that just because someone can do something doesn't mean that it's healthy or optimal to do so. I could and did eat fast food every day, but despite being thin and feeling fine, had a poor lipid panel.
Similarly, I suspect that deviating from the norm (evolutionarily) has consequences that may not be immediately realized. After all, humans are 99.9% similar genetically.
There's certainly an increased risk of death from e.g. falling asleep at the wheel, but I'm not aware that sleep deprivation can kill you outright. People have gone without any sleep for extensive periods and recovered quite normally after a couple nights' sleep.
It may be that people recover normally with some sleep, however if you don't get that sleep you will die (after you start to hallucinate and then that progresses to dementia). Fatal familial insomnia, is named Fatal for a reason.
I think the other point here is that it's physically impossible to stay awake long enough to die of sleep deprivation unless you actually have a condition preventing sleep.
I'd be skeptical of what you claimed. There are similar diseases to FFI which involve dementia, hallucination and death -- but don't involve insomnia. The insomnia might just be another symptom.
Besides which, if you deprived yourself of sleep to that point, I expect you'd just go to sleep.
Diseases with similar causes such as CJD also involve hallucinations and dementia and don't involve lack of sleep, so I'm not 100% convinced that it's the lack of sleep that is causing the death in these cases, although it's an interesting data point.
I agree. Fatal familial insomniac's death is brough about by neurodegeneration caused by prions. Another non-fatal illness which inhebits sleep for extensive periods is Morvan's syndrome [0] for which there has been EEG recordings showing no sleep for 4 months [1] and showing no imparement of memory or intellectual performance!
In one of Michel Jouvet's[1] experiments for developing the drug modifinil, he deprived cats of sleep until they drowned in a vat of water. On average, the cats managed to survive 35 days with only micro-sleep[2].
Or perhaps I've found the perfect sleep schedule for me.
If you don't need an alarm clock, then, yes, maybe. You could try to measure your reflexes along the month, it's possible you've learned to ignore fatigue.
You must have an extremely sedentary lifestyle. If I don't get at least 8 hours I don't have energy to do shit. I can't lift, walking to/from work sucks, doing anything sucks really. I'd only sleep less if I worked remotely + didn't have physical obligations.
Yes and no. Working in an office, but I go to the gym 3 times a week, 2 hours each time. I also take public transportation to go to work which require me about one hour of walk daily.
I also spend all that not sleeping time with friends in bars and clubs.
I never needed much sleep. My mother had to ground me because I wouldn't sleep or wouldn't stay in bed. After a while I would simply get tired of laying still not sleeping and I would read books or watch tv.
I used to be a sleep walker as a young child too...
Nope. Getting decent muscle gain, lost a lot of weight and generally look healthier. Me and a friend always go together. He is the kind of guy that can't live without 8 hours of sleep.
We are equal in pretty much everything. He beats me in some points, I beat him in other.
Yes, I would agree that sleep deprivation would be bad. However, what I am saying is that I'm not feeling tired in the slightest.
I wonder how this works for people who have stayed up for multiple days at a time. I know of people who have underwent sleep deprivation studies for over several days. The current record, I think, is 2 weeks. Personally, I have stayed up 3 nights in a row once to study for a chemistry exam. I've had great mental clarity and focus during the entire time. Yes, it was harder to do than fully rested. But, I have often found that I do better under pressure anyways.
By the way, I also ended up getting the highest score on the exam and in the class. It was a brutal chemistry course. Only two of us got A's, and the other guy got an A-.
This is really cool, and surprisingly similar to the way some software systems are designed. Probably because I have been researching it a lot, but this reminds me of a data replication system, where data builds and builds during active periods of the day, and then at night when activity slows, the back logs are processed and cleared by morning.
The obligatory link for any discussion of a report on a preliminary research result is the article "Warning Signs in Experimental Design and Interpretation"[3] by Peter Norvig, director of research at Google, on how to interpret scientific research. Considering carefully how the current research was done (after a good night's sleep, of course) may help suggest further research that will advance our understanding of what sleep is good for.
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=6567966
[2] http://www.phdcomics.com/comics.php?f=1174
[3] http://norvig.com/experiment-design.html