Sleep is a normal state of rest that is characterized by unconsciousness, reduced activity, and limited sensory responsiveness. Sleep differs from other states of reduced consciousness, such as drug intoxication or coma, because it is spontaneous, periodic, and readily reversible. Sleep is usually described by contrasting it with wakefulness, which is characterized by consciousness, sensory responsiveness, and purposeful activity.
Sleep is one of the least understood aspects of human and animal behavior. It occurs in virtually every vertebrate species and seems to be necessary to healthy functioning, but science has been slow to discover how and why sleep occurs. The biological events that take place during sleep are subtle, and many seem to occur at a cellular level within the brain. These events are difficult to observe, and as a consequence our understanding of sleep has developed slowly.
Although the sleeping person seems inactive, the sleeping brain exhibits variations in activity throughout the sleep period. Recordings of brain activity, known as electroencephalograms (EEGs), show patterns that occur in a regular cycle lasting about 90 to 100 minutes. This cycle includes relatively brief periods of rapid-eye-movement
(REM) sleep, characterized by back-and-forth movement of the eyes and changes in autonomic nervous system activity. REM is absent in the other phases of the sleep cycle, which are characterized as non-REM (NREM) sleep. Sleep can be divided into five distinct stages based on EEG and REM activity:
The first 90-minute sleep cycle of the night begins with Stage 1 NREM sleep and progresses through Stages 2, 3, and 4, ending with a period of REM sleep. Subsequent cycles usually replace Stage 1 with the REM period. In a typical night of sleep, the earlier cycles tend to include more Stage 3 and 4 NREM sleep, with briefer REM periods. As the night progresses, the REM periods tend to get longer while the NREM periods get shorter.
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Author Info: Denise L. Schmutte Ph.D., The Gale Group Inc., Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Nursing and Allied Health, 2002 |