Goodbye sleepless nights

Ikohn4ever

CAGiversary!
Feedback
5 (100%)
Machine Means End To Sleepless Nights

A device worn on the head could in squeeze the benefit of eight hours' sleep into just two or three hours.

Scientists in the US used a technique called transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to induce slow waves - indicative of the deepest phase of sleep and essential for learning ability and mood, in a group of sleeping volunteers.

A TMS device sends harmless magnetic signals through the scalp and skull and into the brain, where it activates electrical impulses.

The researchers found that positioning the TMS machine the right way triggered slow waves that travelled throughout the brain.

Slow wave activity occupies 80% of sleeping hours.

During slow wave sleep, waves of electrical impulses wash across the brain at a rate of roughly one a second.


With each magnetic pulse, the volunteers' brains immediately generated slow waves typical of deep sleep.

"Creating slow waves on demand could some day lead to treatments for insomnia," said study leader Prof Giulio Tononi, from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

"Theoretically, it could also lead to a magnetically stimulated `power nap' which might confer the benefit of eight hours' sleep in just a few hours."

Prof Tononi believes sleep is essential to prevent the brain overloading.

Memory involves strengthening synapses - connections between brain cells formed by learning.

Sleep might allow the connections created during the day to relax at night, according to Prof Tononi.

The research appeared in an early edition of the American journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

http://news.sky.com/skynews/article/0,,30000-1264358,00.html


I know sometimes i toss and turn a lot at night, this would be something really helpful
 
[quote name='Michaellvortega']Notice the part hidden in the middle?[/QUOTE]



ehh that was my bad, there was an ad in the middle of the article
 
Hmmm...this kinda scares me.

But then again, I just made an appointment with the sleep clinic next month anyway...maybe it'll be alternative therapy as opposed to what I am facing. (Sadly, it won't be...)
 
Haha, he admits that we don't even really know why people sleep, but somehow he can theorize that such a device can be a good substitute for sleeping.

I certainly hope it was the media rather than the scientist that was so overly optimistic.
 
[quote name='briansraregames']...but you're still hungry.[/QUOTE]omg best post ever since bring da pain and bring da ruckus!!!!!
 
I dont think we should be messing with sleep like this until we fully understand how sleep cycles work. We don't know what stages 2 and 3 of sleep are for and we've barely scratched the surface on 1 and 4. We know somethings happening, but not what. This won't end well.
 
I use noise from this software to get me to sleep:
http://www.bwgen.com/

Really useful because I live in a condo where ppl are always making lots of noise all around, and the white noise blocks them out. I think you can still download a free shareware copy too, so there is little loss if it doesn't work for you.
 
bread's done
Back
Top