What Happens When You Sleep?
Until
the 1950s, most people thought of sleep as a passive,
dormant part of our daily lives. We now know that our brains
are very active during sleep. Moreover, sleep affects our
daily functioning and our physical and mental health in many
ways that we are just beginning to understand.
Nerve-signaling chemicals called neurotransmitters
control whether we are asleep or awake by acting on
different groups of nerve cells, or neurons, in the brain.
Neurons in the brainstem, which connects the brain with the
spinal cord, produce neurotransmitters such as serotonin and
norepinephrine that keep some parts of the brain active
while we are awake. Other neurons at the base of the brain
begin signaling when we fall asleep. These neurons appear to
"switch off" the signals that keep us awake. Research also
suggests that a chemical called adenosine builds up in our
blood while we are awake and causes drowsiness. This
chemical gradually breaks down while we sleep.
During sleep, we usually pass through five phases of sleep:
stages 1, 2, 3, 4, and REM (rapid eye movement)
sleep. These stages progress in a cycle from stage 1 to REM
sleep, then the cycle starts over again with stage 1 (see
figure 1 ). We spend almost 50 percent of our total
sleep time in stage 2 sleep, about 20 percent in REM sleep,
and the remaining 30 percent in the other stages. Infants,
by contrast, spend about half of their sleep time in REM
sleep.
During stage 1, which is light sleep, we drift in and out of
sleep and can be awakened easily. Our eyes move very slowly
and muscle activity slows. People awakened from stage 1
sleep often remember fragmented visual images.
More about the Stages of Sleep
here
Part 1:
What Happens When You Sleep?
Part 2:
The Different Stages of Sleep
Part 3:
REM Sleep
Source: National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke
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