<http://healthydebates.com/brain-actually-makes-decisions-sleep/> 


Your Brain Actually Makes Decisions While You Sleep


By MRHEALTH <http://healthydebates.com/author/mrhealth/>  • On September 22,
2014 <http://healthydebates.com/brain-actually-makes-decisions-sleep/>  • In
News <http://healthydebates.com/category/news/>  News
<http://healthydebates.com/category/news/>
<http://healthydebates.com/brain-actually-makes-decisions-sleep/#comments> 1






(Thomas Andrillon
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2014/09/17/your-brain-actua
lly-makes-decisions-while-you-sleep/> )  The idea that during sleep our
minds shut down from the outside world is ancient and one that is still
deeply anchored in our view of sleep today, despite some everyday life
experiences and recent scientific discoveries that would tend to prove that
our brains don’t completely switch off from our environment.

On the contrary, our brains can keep the gate slightly open. For example, we
wake up more easily when we hear our own name or a particularly salient
sound such as an alarm clock or a fire alarm compared to equally loud but
less relevant sounds.

In research published in Current Biology, we went one step further to show
that complex stimuli can not only be processed while we sleep but that this
information can be used to make decisions, similarly as when we’re awake.

Our approach was simple: We built on knowledge about how the brain quickly
automates complex chores. Driving a car, for example, requires integrating a
lot of information at the same time, making rapid decisions and putting them
into action through complex motor sequences. And you can drive all the way
home without remembering anything, as we do when we say we’re on “automatic
pilot.”

When we’re asleep, the brain regions critical for paying attention to or
implementing instructions are deactivated, of course, which makes it
impossible to start performing a task. But we wanted to see whether any
processes continued in the brain after sleep onset if participants in an
experiment were given an automatized task just before.

To do this, we carried out experiments in which we got participants to
categorize spoken words that were separated into two categories: words that
referred to animals or objects — for example “cat” or “hat,” in a first
experiment; then real words like “hammer” vs. pseudo-words (words that can
be pronounced but are found nowhere in the dictionary) like “fabu” in a
second one.

Participants were asked to indicate the category of the word that they heard
by pressing a left or right button. Once the task became more automatic, we
asked them to continue to respond to the words, but they were also allowed
to fall asleep. Since they were lying down in a dark room, most of them fell
asleep while words were being played.

At the same time we monitored their state of vigilance thanks to EEG
electrodes placed on their head. Once they were asleep, and without
disturbing the flow of words they were hearing, we gave our participants new
items from the same categories. The idea here was to force them to extract
the meaning of the word (in the first experiment) or to check whether a word
was part of the lexicon (in the second experiment) in order to be able to
respond.

Of course, when asleep, participants stopped pressing buttons. So in order
to check whether their brains were still responding to the words, we looked
at the activity in the motor areas of the brain. Planning to press a button
on your left involves your right hemisphere and vice-versa. By looking at
the lateralization of brain activity in motor areas, it is possible to see
whether someone is preparing a response and toward which side. Applying this
method to our sleepers allowed us to show that even during sleep, their
brains continued to routinely prepare for right and left responses according
to the meaning of the words they were hearing.

Even more interesting, at the end of the experiment and after they woke up,
participants had no memory of the words they heard during their sleep,
though they recalled the words heard while they were awake very well. So not
only did they process complex information while being completely asleep, but
they did it unconsciously. Our work sheds new light about the brain’s
ability to process information while asleep but also while being
unconscious.

This study is just the beginning. Important questions have yet to be
answered. If we are able to prepare for actions during sleep, why is it that
we do not perform them? What kind of processing can or cannot be achieved by
the sleeping brain? Can sentences or series of sentences be processed? What
happens when we dream? Would these sounds be incorporated into the dream
scenery?

But most importantly, our work revives that age-old fantasy of learning
during our sleep. It is well known that sleep is important to consolidate
previously learned information or that some basic form of learning like
conditioning can take place while we are asleep. But can more complex forms
of learning take place and what would be the cost in terms of what
sacrifices the brain would make to do this?

Sleep is important for the brain and total sleep deprivation leads to death
after about two to four weeks. Indeed, it should be borne in mind that sleep
is a crucial phenomenon and universal to all animals. We proved here that
sleep is not an all-or-none state, not that forcing our brain to learn and
do things during the night would be ultimately beneficial in the long run.

                 Thé Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja and Dr. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda is in
anarchy"
                    Kuungana Mulindwa Mawasiliano Kikundi
"Pamoja na Yoweri Museveni, Ssabassajja na Dk. Kiiza Besigye, Uganda ni
katika machafuko"

 

_______________________________________________
Ugandanet mailing list
[email protected]
http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet

UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/

All Archives can be found at http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted them (including 
attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible for them in any way.
---------------------------------------

Reply via email to