Lecture 8
For herbivores, the higher their weight, the less they sleep
Carnivores | Herbivores |
---|---|
Sleep more because they get an energetic kick in their diet faster | Sleep less because they need to eat all the time to maintain their weight |
There is no obvious correlation between sleep duration and ability/intelligence
Longest sleepers = koalas
Shortest sleepers = elephants
Dolphins sleep 1 hemisphere at a time because they need to remember to breathe
Sea otters sleep 1 hemisphere at a time in the sea but 2 hemispheres at a time on the land
Some birds sleep 1 hemisphere at a time in long-distance flights
Sleep loss = lower immune defense
Fewer immune system cells (white blood cells)
Some immune markers are affected by even 1 day of sleep deprivation
Sleep changes with disease:
We sleep more
Maybe to conserve the precious energy required to fight the disease
Increase in NREM sleep + decrease in REM sleep
Decrease in NREM sleep bout length → sleep fragmentation because we wake up more often
More heat production → fever
Sleep has a metabolic benefit for the whole body
There is less glucose use in NREM sleep
Sleep-wake cycle: schedule of energy investments
Wake | Sleep |
---|---|
Waking Effort (WE): | Biological Investment (BI): |
Thermoregulatory Effort (TE): |
Sleep is involved in the conservation of calories:
Lower body temperature in sleep
Hibernation
Reduced energy use
Short sleep is associated with:
Risk of diabetes
Obesity
Cravings for carbs
Lower glucose tolerance
The glymphatic system, which serves a waste clearance function for the CNS, is more active in sleep
Glial cells eliminate neurotoxins such as amyloid beta
Astrocytes create fluid-conducting channels that facilitate the distribution of important molecules for brain functioning
Influx = lipids and other molecules
Outflow = metabolic waste
Wake = new synapses
Sleep = remove unnecessary synapses
New learning happens primarily by synaptic potentiation
Synaptic potentiation occurs primarily in wake when the organism interacts with the environment, not in sleep when it is disconnected
Renormalization of synaptic strength happens primarily during sleep when the brain is spontaneously active off-line, not in wake when a neuron’s inputs are biased by a particular situation
This renormalization and downregulation of synapses happens during NREM sleep and is shown through cortical slow waves and hippocampal sharp waves
Wake: sensory input → current sampling + synaptic potentiation
Sleep: sensory disconnection = comprehensive sampling + synaptic down-selection
Sleep helps to restore cognitive functions such as:
Memory
Reflexes
Attention
Mood
Emotional reactivity
Emotion
REM sleep internally generate activity that prevents occipital brain areas from being inactive
Sleep is for neural reorganization until 2-3 years of age
Sleep is then for repair and clearance
Sleep most likely serves many functions
Sleep appears in any organism with a neuronal-glial network
Sleep might be an emergent property because it comes out of the system but it not explained by the system itself
We don’t know if plants sleep because sleep is defined as a brain state and they don’t have a brain
Most animals have some type of quiet sleep
New neurons grow in the hippocampus even in adulthood
Chronic sleep disruption may lead to less neurogenesis because it makes it harder to make new memories and encode them
For herbivores, the higher their weight, the less they sleep
Carnivores | Herbivores |
---|---|
Sleep more because they get an energetic kick in their diet faster | Sleep less because they need to eat all the time to maintain their weight |
There is no obvious correlation between sleep duration and ability/intelligence
Longest sleepers = koalas
Shortest sleepers = elephants
Dolphins sleep 1 hemisphere at a time because they need to remember to breathe
Sea otters sleep 1 hemisphere at a time in the sea but 2 hemispheres at a time on the land
Some birds sleep 1 hemisphere at a time in long-distance flights
Sleep loss = lower immune defense
Fewer immune system cells (white blood cells)
Some immune markers are affected by even 1 day of sleep deprivation
Sleep changes with disease:
We sleep more
Maybe to conserve the precious energy required to fight the disease
Increase in NREM sleep + decrease in REM sleep
Decrease in NREM sleep bout length → sleep fragmentation because we wake up more often
More heat production → fever
Sleep has a metabolic benefit for the whole body
There is less glucose use in NREM sleep
Sleep-wake cycle: schedule of energy investments
Wake | Sleep |
---|---|
Waking Effort (WE): | Biological Investment (BI): |
Thermoregulatory Effort (TE): |
Sleep is involved in the conservation of calories:
Lower body temperature in sleep
Hibernation
Reduced energy use
Short sleep is associated with:
Risk of diabetes
Obesity
Cravings for carbs
Lower glucose tolerance
The glymphatic system, which serves a waste clearance function for the CNS, is more active in sleep
Glial cells eliminate neurotoxins such as amyloid beta
Astrocytes create fluid-conducting channels that facilitate the distribution of important molecules for brain functioning
Influx = lipids and other molecules
Outflow = metabolic waste
Wake = new synapses
Sleep = remove unnecessary synapses
New learning happens primarily by synaptic potentiation
Synaptic potentiation occurs primarily in wake when the organism interacts with the environment, not in sleep when it is disconnected
Renormalization of synaptic strength happens primarily during sleep when the brain is spontaneously active off-line, not in wake when a neuron’s inputs are biased by a particular situation
This renormalization and downregulation of synapses happens during NREM sleep and is shown through cortical slow waves and hippocampal sharp waves
Wake: sensory input → current sampling + synaptic potentiation
Sleep: sensory disconnection = comprehensive sampling + synaptic down-selection
Sleep helps to restore cognitive functions such as:
Memory
Reflexes
Attention
Mood
Emotional reactivity
Emotion
REM sleep internally generate activity that prevents occipital brain areas from being inactive
Sleep is for neural reorganization until 2-3 years of age
Sleep is then for repair and clearance
Sleep most likely serves many functions
Sleep appears in any organism with a neuronal-glial network
Sleep might be an emergent property because it comes out of the system but it not explained by the system itself
We don’t know if plants sleep because sleep is defined as a brain state and they don’t have a brain
Most animals have some type of quiet sleep
New neurons grow in the hippocampus even in adulthood
Chronic sleep disruption may lead to less neurogenesis because it makes it harder to make new memories and encode them