selectedauthors.com selectedauthors.com selectedauthors.com
Site Home About Us Privacy Policy ToS Add Url Submit Article
Search:   
Add URL
 

Home Family & Garden

Teens & Children

Computers & Networking

People & Communities

Adventure & Sports

Lifestyle & Fashion

Medical Care

Health & Therapy

Science & Space

Companies & Business

Employment & Careers

Eating & Drinking

Policies & Law

Property & Estate

Academics & Education

Self Enhancement

Culture & Art

Automobiles

Finance & Investment

News & Events

Online Shopping

Games & Play

Travel & Vacation

Music & Entertainment

 

Site Home › Academics & Education › Science Courses
 

The Process of Sleep in Humans

 

Author: Alex Rider

Many of us really enjoy falling into bed and drifting off to sleep, particularly after a hard days work. How many of us know what our body goes through during this seemingly simple period of inactivity?

Up to the 1950's sleep was regarded as a time when a persons body and mind shut down for the night. What we now know is that various parts of our brain are in fact very active throughout the time we spend asleep. Time spent asleep is important with preparing us for the challenges of the next day. Slowly, we are unraveling these secrets to what exactly goes on.

Our brains contain very high quantities of nerves, better known as neurons, to which signaling chemicals termed neurotransmitters act to enable us to be asleep or awake. Neurotransmitters like norepinephrin and serotonin, released from the brain stem between the lower brain and top of the spinal column, act to make certain sections of our head fully functional whilst we are awake. When we begin to go to sleep there are other neurons at the base of our brains that become active, switching off the activity of the neurons that keep us awake. Throughout the day a chemical known as adenosine is believed to accumulate, it has the effect of making people more and more tired. Once asleep adenosine is known to be broken down.

When asleep people typically pass through five sleep stages:

1: Light sleep where we can be easily disturbed. Eye and muscle movements are slow. Sensations of falling are not uncommon in this stage.
2: Eye movements stop, brain activity slows, infrequent rapid bursts of brain activity exist.
3: Very slow brain activity, frequent small brain activity bursts. Difficult to disturb at this deep sleep level.
4: Only slow brain activity occurs now. No eye or muscle activity. Difficult to disturb at this deep sleep level. If awoken, takes a few minutes to orientate one's self.
REM (rapid eye movement): Increased breathing, more irregular, shallow breathing, rapid random eye movement. Muscles in limbs become paralyzed temporarily. Hear beats increase per minute alongside increased blood pressure. Dreaming is frequent and sometimes vivid.

These sleep stages make up a sleep cycle that is completed roughly every 90-110 minutes. Moving through all the stages from 1 to REM is known to be in one single sleep cycle. Half of our sleep involves stage 2, 20% involves REM, the other stages taking up the remaining 30% of our sleeping time. As the length of time we have been asleep each night increases so does our time during each sleep cycle that we remain in REM, the deep sleep stages of 3 and 4 reducing.

To a certain extent whilst in REM our bodies are unable to regulate their temperatures, unusually hot or cold temperatures can disturb this sleep stage. Losses in REM time tend to involve the next sleep cycles REM being longer so as to regain what REM time was previously lost.

Our bodies have a biological 24-hour time clock known as a circadian rhythm, with peaks of sleepiness occurring every 12 hours i.e. usually at night and around mid-afternoon. Through neurological and hormonal processes light appears to trigger people to remain awake, although light is not always required to achieve this result, e.g. with night shift workers inverting their days work and sleep periods. Increased time spent awake leads to a build-up of time that person needs sleeping.

Whilst asleep it is believed that important restorative and adaptive bodily functions are in progress. Long-term memory is reorganized, tissue is renewed or repaired, the mind is rejuvenated. Younger people tend to have a greater degree of deep sleep than the older population. 6-8 hours of sleep per day is all that the average person requires.

Author Bio:

If breast enhancement surgery seems very invasive learn more about non surgical breast enhancement at www.breastenhancementfacts.com/breastenhancementblog/7/non-surgical-breast-enhancement/

You can also reach this article by using: The Process of Sleep in Humans, Academics & Education, Science Courses
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Kids' Activities: The Magic Bag Is A Great Way to Introduce Kids To Fossils
 
The Perfect Way To Bearcat Scanner Uniden
 
Make Your Own Biodiesel Fuel
 
"We Don't Know What We are Talking About" - Nobel Laureate David Gross
 
Detroit Schools Excel in National Competitions
 
Answers to Teachers, Counselor, and Principcal Questions About Students Who Struggle and Have Challenges
 
Improve Libido and Impotence With the Power of the Mind
 
DOE, NIH Discuss Informatics Goals
 
Beating the High Price of Gasoline with Biodiesel
 
WebQuests Let Students Explore Independent Ally in Indianapolis Schools
 
 
 
 
 

How to Make a Thermometer

A thermometer is an instrument that measures the temperature. Depending on what country you live in, ... - James Hunt
 

The Role of Private Enterprise in Putting Man into Space - Part 1

Has NASA failed in it's quest to put man out into the cosmos? Will profit coupled with man's need to ... - Thomas Sullivan
 

What's Killing Your Publishing Career?

With the large increase of books being published by self-publishers, and the up-rise of print on dem ... - CF Jackson
 

School is Just a Waste of Time

Children usually do not understand the importance of education. "School is just a waste of time" - t ... - Aaron Schwartz
 

Apes or Gods?

We are about to experience a major paradigm shift based on a natural law which has yet to be fully u ... - Paul Freynet
 

Nitrous oxide - Laughing gas uses in modern society

Laughing gas, nitrous oxide used to be routinely given as a dental anaesthetic. This is no longer th ... - Ventura
 
 
   Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> ToS
© 2008 www.selectedauthors.com All Rights Reserved.