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The Matt Walker Podcast
#17: Sleep is Bloody Remarkable
#17: Sleep is Bloody Remarkable

#17: Sleep is Bloody Remarkable

The Matt Walker PodcastGo to Podcast Page

Matthew Walker
·
7 Clips
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Mar 14, 2022
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Episode Summary
Episode Transcript
0:00
Hi there, it's Matt here, and welcome back. Once again to the podcast. Now. It probably comes as no surprise to learn that. I find sleep to be the most big guy, laying and flat-out, fantastic thing in the world. And part of that. Love, affair
0:23
is just down to the sheer number of ink and see visibly. Astonishing fact.
0:30
Facts
0:30
that sleep offers. So every now and then, I'm going to release an episode called Sleep, is bloody
0:39
remarkable and in each of
0:42
these short episodes,
0:44
I'll describe some of the extraordinary
0:48
Feats of slumbering remarkable nurse that there is in this field of sleep research, the first of those today,
1:00
Is half brain sleep. Now. I once mentioned
1:05
something about this at the start of a podcast interview a while ago
1:11
and to this day I still
1:14
receive emails about it. And I thought where better to start than double-clicking on this thing called half brain sleep.
1:23
Now, our story
1:24
starts with dolphins and whales which are in a class in the animal kingdom, that
1:29
That we call
1:30
cetaceans. And they are a splendid
1:35
example of half brain sleep.
1:38
Actually, the
1:39
technical term for this phenomenon is called unihemispheric Sleep. Meaning that one of
1:46
the two
1:46
hemispheres, which when put together, make up the full sphere that we call the brain
1:53
one, half of the brain, one side of it, one hemisphere will actually be asleep.
2:00
What's the other is awake? Now? I don't mean
2:04
just somewhat awake sort of partially drowsy and partially
2:08
awake. I mean fully completely wide awake.
2:14
While the other side is very fully,
2:17
very completely in deep non-rem Sleep, indeed, when you've watched those incredible BBC series by Sir, David Attenborough, who is
2:29
One of my absolute Idols
2:32
in terms of
2:34
being a communicator and narrator
2:37
and gosh, his voice is
2:39
just lovely Panache about it. But when you've seen those programs, particularly things like the blue planet, some of those shots of the dolphins and whales will have been taken. Whilst they are having unihemispheric
2:54
sleep. Like, I could tell, because well, I won't bore you why. But
2:58
anyway,
2:59
You see it's all about survival because one half of the brain must always stay awake to maintain life necessary movement in the Aquatic environment and that half of the brain will be bristling with frenetic
3:19
fast brainwave activity. However, the other half of the brain
3:23
will at times fall into the most beautiful deep non-rem sleep.
3:29
And you will see these big powerful rhythmic slow. Brain waves just drenching that one half of the brain, all the while the other half of the brain Wide Awake, frenetic, fast,
3:43
brain, wave
3:44
activity and that to me is particularly astonishing when you consider the fact that those two hemispheres are heavily wired together. With deep, thick Criss Crossing fibers.
3:59
Berbers and despite that heavily, intertwined interdependent Rich set of connections between the two hemispheres. They can do completely opposite
4:12
things. Now, by the way, don't feel bad for the shortchanged side of the brain that has to remain
4:21
awake because after one half of the brain has consumed, its fill
4:27
of deep non-rem
4:28
sleep, then the
4:29
Sides of the brain will switch allowing the previously awake half of the brain to. Now, enjoy a well-earned period of deep non-rem Slumber, but it turns out that the
4:45
gift of half brain sleep
4:48
is not unique to Aquatic. Mammals birds can do it
4:54
to the partner supporting today's podcast.
4:59
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5:12
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5:46
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5:49
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5:59
Word /. Matt Walker and you'll get three benefits. First. You'll get money off your first order second. If you use the link athletic greens.com forward slash Matt Walker, you will get
6:12
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packs with your first order if you use that link, so, once again, that's athletic greens.com for
6:29
/, Matt Walker. And with that said, let's get back to the podcast.
6:40
Birds do it for
6:41
slightly, different though, equally life-preserving reasons. It allows them to keep well, quite literally an eye on
6:53
things. Now, when birds are alone,
6:57
one half of the brain must always stay awake. And what it's doing is watching out for threat detection in the environment. So it will always have one eye.
7:10
Open. But that allows the
7:12
other side of the brain to fall fast asleep, which means that the
7:17
corresponding, and it turns out as the opposite side of the
7:20
head that corresponding. I will be closed. And you can see this in birds. You can sort of
7:27
go onto YouTube and you can type bird, sleep or unihemispheric
7:31
sleep, and you'll find these videos. It's so amazing. It's remarkable things, get even
7:37
more. Preposterous when
7:40
Birds group together. So think of a flock of birds all lined up in a row on a branch here, is what happens
7:52
with the exception of the birds at the far left and the
7:56
far right sides of the branch of the flock. The rest of the group
8:02
will sleep with
8:03
both halves of their brain and therefore both of their eyes will be closed.
8:10
However, the poor girls or guys at the far left and the far right of the flock. They don't get to sleep with both halves of their
8:22
brain. Instead. The one at the far left will have
8:26
one of the hemispheres. It turns out the
8:28
right hemisphere being Wide Awake, maintaining opening of the left eye so that it gets 180 degrees of
8:40
Threat detection on the left
8:42
side. And the one on the far. Right side will have
8:46
the
8:46
opposite hemisphere
8:48
wide awake and the other
8:50
side fast asleep. So it has
8:52
its right eye. Open giving
8:55
180 degrees of
8:57
right eye threat detection, which means as a combination they get 360
9:06
degrees of full panoramic threat detection.
9:10
Ian isn't that remarkable. Now, you may
9:14
think at this point. Okay, when those Sentinels at the far left and the far right side, have taken the turn,
9:24
surely they get the chance to kind of fold into the middle and they can sleep with both
9:29
sides of their brain. And someone else has to take a turn at the far left. And the far right ends. There is no such equality. There is no sir.
9:40
Parity in the avian World,
9:43
those end Sentinels have to stay there. But here's what they do.
9:49
After sometime. After one of the sides of the brain has had its fill of sleep, those left
9:56
and right Sentinels on the outer edges of the flock. They will stand
10:01
up. They will
10:02
rotate
10:03
180 degrees.
10:06
They will sit back
10:07
down now.
10:10
They will switch sides of the sleeping brain. So now the other
10:14
side gets to sleep and the other half has to be wide
10:18
awake. I know sing it with me. People sleep is bloody remarkable. Perhaps. The only thing,
10:28
more remarkable would be if we humans could sleep in half brain measure. Well, we can, or
10:40
at,
10:40
Very mild version
10:43
of unihemispheric sleep
10:46
one that normally occurs. However, for similar reasons. Now, if you can /, the electrical depth of each half each side
10:56
of the brain of a human being. When
10:59
they are sleeping at
11:00
home, in their familiar
11:02
environment, the depth of Deep, Sleep of deep electrical, brain wave activity is about the same, but if you bring that
11:10
A person into a strange location and
11:13
unfamiliar location such as, for example, a sleep
11:17
laboratory or even if you take them into a hotel, then one half of the brain will not go down into as deeper sleep as the other half of the brain as if it's standing on guard with just a tad more vigilance due to the potentially less safe.
11:40
Text that your brain has registered while you were awake and it's perhaps one of the reasons why so many of us feel as though we sleep. So poorly on the first night in a
11:53
hotel room.
11:54
Now. The last point I want to make is that you've heard me be probably very specific about the stage of sleep when all of this uni,
12:03
hemispheric half brain sleep is happening, which is during
12:07
deep non-rem sleep and that
12:10
That is very deliberate. We have never seen unihemispheric sleep across any species when it comes to rapid eye movement, sleep or dream sleep. It's only during non-rem sleep. That we see the expression, the ability to have one half of the brain asleep and the other half of the brain are weak. And we don't know why this is, we don't know why it is that when you go into dream sleep.
12:40
Any other species goes into REM sleep. Why the two halves of the brain cannot separate and sleep separately from
12:49
each other. With the other half being
12:51
awake. It seems to be a unique property. Only able only gifted to this thing called Deep,
12:59
non-rem Sleep. All of which is to say, as you can see, I
13:03
think sleep. Truly is
13:06
bloody remarkable.
13:09
There will be
13:10
more such remarkable nurse at another word. Remarkable nurse episodes in the future. If you enjoy this type of stuff, if you enjoy these types of episodes or if you don't do let me know on Instagram and Twitter, that's where you can find me. Give me some feedback on these things. Maybe you don't find them as remarkable as me and you just think, can you just go back to the normal topics? This stuff just doesn't interest me. And with that, I will wish you a
13:40
Bloody remarkable night of sleep. Bye for now.
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