Saturday, August 29, 2015

Sleep is a magical thing. You lay down after a long day with the overwhelming and intimidating issues of the day on your mind, and (usually) within 5-15 minutes you are swept away into dream land for 7-9 hours and when you rise from this marvelous slumber you feel refreshed and ready to deal with the day, but what happens during those mysterious hours that you are so unavailable to the world? Even though those hours seem quite boring and short to you they are actually action packed and filled with brainwaves that would keep any scientist glued to his/her seat. When you are awake beta brainwaves are firing through your head these waves are small and fast and are the waves that keep you alert enough to deal with all of the problems that come throughout the day. When you lay down or are sitting in a resting position and are doing a relaxing activity your brain starts to transition to alpha waves which are similar to beta waves but are higher in amplitude and don’t come quite as fast. After staying with alpha waves for a while you start to feel the first stages of sleep and your brain waves keep coming in slower, and higher. Those waves are called theta, and then later throughout your sleep delta. Now all these waves come in when you are in your NREM sleep, in all stages 1, 2, 3, & 4. When you finally enter in REM sleep (which is where most of your vivid and wild dreams come from) your brain does a very interesting thing and initiates beta waves again. If you want a way to better understand these waves and their relationship to each other please reference “Sleep” by Steven W. Lockley, and Russell G. Foster on page 11 there is a chart that explains these waves very simply.

3 comments:

  1. I'm curious, during the REM sleep, where people usually dream- do they control what happens through their own brain and understanding and somewhat "awake" mind or is it all premeditated and uncontrolled except through the misunderstood sectors of the brain? Just food for thought!

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  2. I think the entire sleeping process is just awesome. And I like Makayla's question! On top of that, why does our brain "choose" to dream certain things? And what decides that we have a nightmare or a pleasant dream?

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  3. I think that our brain decided to have a nightmare versus a pleasant dream when we are consumed by stress or are really anxious. I know before tests I have nightmares that I fail it and the class. But when I'm not stressed or preoccupied by something I usually dream pleasant things.

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