Sleep Flashcards
How does sleep volume reflect how safe an animal is when they sleep?
Very safe = lots of sleep
Moderately safe = moderate amount of sleep
Vulnerable = small amount of sleep
Give some examples of animals turning off their need for sleep.
- Dolphins&whales stay awake 24hrs a day for first couple of weeks after they give birth as baby is very vulnerable, so does baby
- Migratory birds forage for food during the day & fly at night during migration in Spring & Autumn
- Male sandpipers are active up to 23hrs a day for nearly 3 weeks during the Spring breeding season
Why do some animals hibernate?
What happens to them during hibernation?
- To conserve energy whilst food is scarce
- Slows down ageing process
- Temperature & heart rate decrease
- Dendrites lose almost 1/4 of their branches
- Come out of hibernation every few days to raise body temperature (but stay asleep)
What is Unihemispheric sleep?
What animals can sleep unihemispherically?
One hemisphere sleeps (and the contralateral eye) while the other stays awake
- Aquatic mammals
- Many birds
- Some reptiles
What is Inactivity theory of sleep?
- The ‘adaptive’ or ‘evolutionary’ theory
- Suggests inactivity at night helped animals to survive, as they didn’t injure themselves in the dark & weren’t killed by predators
- This trait was passed on through natural selection
A problem with this theory is that it is always safest to remain conscious, even if lying still in the dark
What is Energy conservation theory of sleep?
- Food is not always to come by, so an animal must conserve its energy
- Especially important at night when it may be harder to find food
Support: energy metabolism is reduced during sleep (by 10% in humans)
Problems: animals engaging in Unihemispheric sleep are still using up energy
How do Restorative theories explain the need for sleep?
- During sleep there is restoration of what has been lost from the body while awake
Support: Many major restorative functions occur mainly in sleep e.g. muscle growth, tissue repair, protein synthesis, etc.
What is Brain plasticity theory of sleep?
- Sleep is a time in which the brain develops and changes
Support:
- Sleep appears to be crucial for initial brain development
- Extensive research to suggest improvement in cognitive function following sleep e.g. Ellenbogen et al., 2006
What is a circadian rhythm?
The human biological clock, synchronises to the Earth’s 24hr rotation using signals from the environment, known as zeitgebers (“time-giver”)
What are the Earth’s signals from the environment that control circadian rhythms known as?
Zeitgebers (“time-givers”)
What is the strongest Zeitgeber?
Light
- (although social cues have an influence e.g. getting used to waking up at a certain time to go to work)
- some adaptations have led to stronger temperature zeitgebers
What is the evidence that supports light being the strongest Zeitgeber?
- After an entire night without sleep, you will start to feel more awake when it becomes light (Babkoff et al., 1991)
- When have no reason to wake at a certain time, people in eastern Germany wake 30mins earlier than those in Western Germany - consistent with 30min difference in sun timing (Roennebery, Kumar & Merrow, 2007)
Describe morning people (“Morning Larks”)
Wake early, alert, reach their peak of productivity early
Describe evening people (“Night owls”)
Take longer to warm up in mornings, reach peak of productivity later
What are the negative impacts of being an evening person?
Can lead to ‘social jet lag’
- Lower grades (despite average/above-average intelligence)
- Increased alcohol use & overeating
- Less happy overall
What are mammalian cells?
- Cells that contain “circadian clocks”
- Collections of genes which regulate the expression (‘switching on’) of other genes critical for cell physiology and metabolism
What genes have a direct implication with sleep disorders, diabetes, cancer and bipolar disorder?
Circadian Clock Genes
What does the Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) do?
Synchronise all circadian clocks in the body to the same 24hr cycle
- Is the master circadian pacemaker
- Main driver of rhythms for sleep
How does the Suprachiasmatic Nucleus (SCN) work?
- Has direct photic input from retina
- Has mechanisms which allow them to remain synchronised to each other even in darkness
- Generates circadian rhythm of firing frequency allowing them to synchronise other cells
- Light hits the SCN via a small branch on the optic nerve, known as the retinohypothalamic path