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The Weekly Newsmagazine of Science September 25, 1999 Vol. 156, No. 13


Slumber's Unexplored Landscape
People in traditional societies sleep in eye-opening ways
By Bruce Bower


A Gebusi woman in New Guinea, decked out in her dance costume, catches a few
winks on a woodpile during a male initiation ceremony. (Eileen Knauft)
Ah, the sweet simplicity of sleep. You tramp into your bedroom with sagging
eyelids and stifle a yawn. After disrobing, you douse the lights and climb
into bed. Maybe a little reading or television massages the nerves,
loosening them up for slumber's velvet fingers. In a while, you nod off.
Suddenly, an alarm clock's shrill blast breaks up the dozefest as the sun
pokes over the horizon. You feel a bit drowsy but shake it off and face the
new day. Images of a dream dissolve like sugar in the morning's first cup of
coffee.

There's a surprising twist, however, at the heart of this familiar ritual.
It simply doesn't apply to people currently living outside of the modern
Western world—or even to inhabitants of Western Europe as recently as 200
years ago.

In such contexts, and probably throughout human evolution, solitary shut-eye
organized around a regular bedtime and a single bout of sleep proves about
as common as stock car racing or teleconferencing. Surprisingly,
anthropologists have rarely scrutinized the sleep patterns and practices of
different cultures, much less those of different classes and ethnic groups
in the United States.

An initial attempt to draw back the veils of sleep in hunter-gatherer groups
and other traditional societies has uncovered a wide variety of sleep
customs, reports anthropologist Carol M. Worthman of Emory University in
Atlanta. None of these snooze styles, however, looks anything like what
modern Western folk take for granted.

This finding raises profound questions for the burgeoning discipline of
sleep research, Worthman says. Over the past 50 years, scientists have
avidly delved into slumber's biology. Early research identified periods of
rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, during which intense dreams often occur.
Current efforts pursue genes involved in wakefulness and sleeping (SN:
8/14/99, p. 100). Researchers have also taken strides toward treating
insomnia and other sleep disturbances.

While investigators readily concede that they don't yet know why people
sleep and dream, they assume that they at least know how people should
sleep: alone or with a partner for a solid chunk of the night. Sleep studies
therefore take place in laboratories where individuals catch winks while
hooked up to a bevy of brain and body monitors.

However, the distinctive sleep styles of non-Western groups may mold sleep's
biology in ways undreamed of in sleep labs, Worthman suggests. They may
influence factors ranging from sleep-related genes to the brain's electrical
output during various sleep phases.

"It's time for scientists to get out into natural sleep environments,"
Worthman remarks. "It's embarrassing that anthropologists haven't done this,
and the lack of such work is impeding sleep research."



A seemingly innocent question awakened Worthman to her discipline's
ignorance of how people sleep. In 1994, she had a conversation with
pediatrician Ronald E. Dahl of the University of Pittsburgh School of
Medicine, who studies the effects of mood disorders on sleep. He asked the
Emory scientist to tell him what anthropologists know about the history and
prehistory of sleep. "[My] bald, if somewhat overstated, answer was 'zero,'"
she says.

Sleep scarcely figures in the literature on either cross-cultural
differences or human evolution, Worthman realized. Investigators generally
relegate slumber to the sidelines, treating it as a biological given with
little potential for variation from one place to another, she holds.

A few researchers have bucked this trend. For instance, anthropologist James
J. McKenna of the University of Notre Dame in Indiana has reported that
babies in many countries outside the United States sleep next to or in the
same room as their parents. Contact with a parent's body helps regulate an
infant's breathing and other physiological functions, he asserts, perhaps
lowering the risk for sudden infant death syndrome (SN: 12/4/93, p. 380).

McKenna's work should have roused investigators of traditional societies out
of their sleep-related torpor, Worthman says. Yet, even seasoned
field-workers have tended to ignore sleep—at least in their published
works—while describing food production, sexual practices, and other facets
of daily life.

So, Worthman contacted seven researchers who she knew had intimate knowledge
of one or more traditional societies, including nomadic foragers, herders,
and village-based farmers. Among these far-flung populations, none of the
investigators, by their own admission, had systematically studied how people
sleep. After plumbing what the researchers had absorbed about nighttime
activities, Worthman has assembled a preliminary picture of sleep practices
in 10 non-Western populations.



Worthman's findings rip the covers off any lingering suspicions that people
everywhere sleep pretty much alike. Far from the wallpapered confines of
middle-class bedrooms, sleep typically unfolds in shared spaces that feature
constant background noise emanating from other sleepers, various domestic
animals, fires maintained for warmth and protection from predators, and
other people's nearby nighttime activities.

Groups in Worthman's analysis include Ache foragers in Paraguay, !Kung
hunter-gatherers in Africa, Swat Pathan herders in Pakistan, and Balinese
farmers in Indonesia. For all these groups and six others, communal sleep
equals safe sleep, because sleepers can count on there being someone else up
or easily awakened at all hours of the night to warn others of a threat or
emergency.

Adult sleepers in traditional societies recline on skins, mats, wooden
platforms, the ground, or just about anything except a thick, springy
mattress. Pillows or head supports are rare, and people doze in whatever
they happen to be wearing. Virtually no one, including children, keeps a
regular bedtime. Individuals tend to slip in and out of slumber several
times during the night. In these unplugged worlds, darkness greatly limits
activity and determines the time allotted to sleep. Folks there frequently
complain of getting too much sleep, not too little.

Many rituals occur at night and exploit the need to sleep. For instance,
initiation rites often force participants to cope with sleep deprivation. In
other ceremonies, individuals enter somnolent, or near-sleep, states in
order to magnify an occasion's psychological impact and to induce spiritual
visions.

Consider the communal sleep of the Gebusi, New Guinea, rainforest dwellers,
who grow fruit in small gardens and occasionally hunt wild pigs. Women,
girls, and babies crowd into a narrow section of a community longhouse to
sleep on mats. Men and boys retreat to an adjacent, more spacious longhouse
area, where they sleep on wooden platforms.

Gebusi females retire at dark for about 10 hours of rest and sleep. In
contrast, the men stay up later and frequently conduct rituals. About once a
month, everyone attends an all-night dance and feast, catching up on sleep
the next day.

Each week or two, Gebusi men go to s‚ances led by a "spirit medium," at
which they try to keep spirits awake throughout the night. Participants
attempt to slip in and out of a near-sleep state as the medium, who's
usually adept at operating in this half-conscious condition, sings about the
spirit world and other matters.

As in most of the other studied societies, the Gebusi express concerns about
exposure to ghosts, evil spirits, and witchcraft during sleep. They consider
deep sleep risky, since a sleeper's spirit may wander off too far and fail
to return. The Gebusi view group slumber as a way to lessen the danger of
spirit loss, which they view as especially likely while a person dreams.



Whether or not one believes that sleeping puts a person's spirit at risk,
slumber appears to have crucial effects on body and mind. A culture's
sleeping style serves as a growing child's training ground for managing
biologically based systems of attention and alertness, Worthman contends.
Balinese farmers provide a striking example of this sleep-related tutoring.

Balinese infants are carried and held continuously by caregivers so that
they learn to fall asleep even in hectic and noisy situations. This grooms
them to exhibit what the Balinese call "fear sleep" later in life, Worthman
says. Children and adults enter fear sleep by suddenly slumping over in a
deep slumber when they or family members confront intense anxiety or an
unexpected fright. They are literally scared into sleep.

Infants in middle-class American homes, who usually sleep alone, may not
learn to ground their sleeping and waking cycles in a flow of sensations
that include bodily contact, smells, and background noises, Worthman
proposes. In fact, babies forced to bounce back and forth between the
sensory overload of the waking world and the sensory barrenness of dark,
quiet bedrooms may often find it difficult to relax, fall asleep, wake up,
or concentrate, she theorizes.

Only cross-cultural studies of children's sleep and behavior can clarify
such issues, Worthman says.

She described her findings and their implications in June at the annual
meeting of the Associated Professional Sleep Societies in Orlando, Fla.

Sleep researchers at the meeting expressed considerable excitement about the
potential for cross-cultural studies. "Worthman is doing innovative and
important work," comments neuroscientist Robert A. Stickgold of the
Massachusetts Mental Health Center in Boston. "It's awakening us to the many
different ways in which people organize sleep."

Stickgold has developed snug-fitting, electrode-studded caps that people can
wear in their own beds to measure brain activity linked to REM and other
sleep stages. Worthman plans to take these "nightcaps," which hook up to
mobile recorders, into the field to study sleep biology in traditional
societies.

"I've been hoping anthropologists would examine sleep cross-culturally for
the past 20 years," remarks psychologist Mary A. Carskadon of the Brown
University School of Medicine in Providence, R.I.

Carskadon has directed studies that indicate that the body's so-called
biological clock gets pushed back during adolescence. Teenagers may require
more sleep than adults and may have a natural tendency to go to sleep later
and wake up later than at other ages, she says.

A related study, directed by neuroscientist Louis J. Ptácek of the
University of Utah in Salt Lake City, finds that a specific gene yanks the
biological clock forward in some adults. People who have this gene tend to
fall asleep by 8:30 p.m. and to awaken before 5:30 a.m., the researchers
report in the September Nature Medicine.

In modern Western cultures, teens' backward shift in sleep timing is
considered a nuisance or a sign of rebellion, while extreme early birds get
diagnosed as sleep disordered. In traditional settings, however, highly
variable sleep schedules among individuals and age groups prove invaluable,
since they allow for someone to be awake or easily roused at all times
should danger arise, Worthman holds.



If sleeping patterns in traditional societies remain little known, those of
prehistoric humans are a total mystery. Still, in settings that roughly
mimic ancient nighttime conditions, sleep undergoes an intriguing shift,
says psychiatrist Thomas A. Wehr of the National Institute of Mental Health
(NIMH) in Bethesda, Md.

When prohibited from using artificial light from dusk until dawn, people who
formerly slumbered in solid blocks of time begin to sleep in two periods
separated by an hour or two of quiet rest and reflection.

Wehr and his coworkers asked 15 healthy adults to rest and sleep in darkness
for 14 hours (6 p.m. to 8 a.m.) each night for several weeks. Volunteers
slept for 11 hours each of the first few nights, apparently to catch up on
their sleep. They then settled into a pattern of lying awake for a couple of
hours before falling asleep for 3 to 5 hours in the evening. An hour or so
of quiet wakefulness ensued, followed by about 4 more hours of sleep in the
early morning.

Many mammals sleep in two major bouts during the night or day, Wehr says.
Animals from rodents to giraffes and the experimental human sleepers secrete
elevated amounts of the hormone prolactin when they rest quietly, even if
they are not asleep. Prolactin may promote a state of calmness that
accompanies sleep, the NIMH scientist suggests.

Participants in Wehr's study usually awoke out of REM sleep to end their
first slumber session. During REM sleep, the brain becomes about as active
as it is when wide awake. One function of this sleep phase may be to set the
stage for waking up, Wehr holds.

If prehistoric people slept in two nightly periods, then regularly awakening
out of REM sleep may have allowed them to reflect on and remember their
dreams in a semiconscious state that's generally unavailable to modern
sleepers. Sleep compressed into a single stint may thus encourage modern
humans to lose touch with dreams, myths, and fantasies, Wehr argues.

These results, first reported in 1993, also raise the possibility that
people who wake up once or twice each night don't necessarily suffer from
insomnia. "A natural human sleep pattern may reassert itself in an unwelcome
world and get labeled as a disorder," Wehr says.

The two-phase sleep pattern observed by Wehr corresponds remarkably closely
to the way in which most Western Europeans slept between 500 and 200 years
ago, according to historian A. Roger Ekirch of Virginia Polytechnic
Institute and State University in Blacksburg. While doing research for a
book on nighttime behaviors during that era, Ekirch came across several
hundred references to what he identifies as "segmented sleep."

>From country farms and villages to city apartments, early modern Europeans
usually sank each evening into what they called a "first sleep," which
lasted for several hours. Shortly after midnight, they awoke and spent 1 or
2 hours in a "watching period." A "second," or "morning," sleep followed.

The watching period presented many opportunities, Ekirch notes. People
coming out of their first sleep often stayed in bed to pray, converse with a
bedfellow, contemplate the day's events or the meaning of a dream, or simply
let their minds wander in a semiconscious state of contentment that was
prized at the time.

A 16th-century physician wrote that many laborers dozed off exhausted at the
start of each night. Sexual intercourse with their wives typically occurred
in the watching period, after a recuperative first sleep.

These days, Western societies treat sleep more as an unavoidable stretch of
downtime than as a prelude to sex or a time for inner reflection. Only
intensive investigations across cultures and classes will illuminate the
lushness of sleep's landscape, Worthman predicts.

Adds Wehr, "We're going to have to reconceptualize what it means to sleep
normally."

 References and sources for this article

>From Science News, Vol. 156, No. 13, September 25, 1999, p. 205. Copyright ©
1999, Science Service.



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