New technique to learn things sleep
You may have heard of sleep tapes that
offer effortless learning during sleep. Your investment in such tapes will not
be money well spent. Learning during sleep should be discouraged! It is
possible to occasionally recall a fraction of the material presented during
sleep (probably only then when it enters your brain during short periods of
transition from REM to temporary waking). There is also ample evidence that
some circuits in the brain can be conditioned during REM sleep; however, the
connection between the senses and the brain in sleep is rather focused on
awakening in danger rather than on processing complex information.
Whatever you might gain from your sleep
tapes will by far be offset by damage to the quality of sleep. If the learning
stimuli do not reach a certain threshold, they will simply be ignored. However,
past a certain value they may prevent the progression of NREM sleep toward
stages 3 and 4. They can also shorten REM sleep.
Interestingly, memories acquired
minutes before falling asleep do not get consolidated! Even a few minutes of
sleep leave a short window of waking time with a complete memory erasure.
Luckily, we rarely learn mission-critical information shortly before dozing
off.
Counter-recommendation for learning
during sleep, does not imply that falling asleep with TV or radio turned on
should be discouraged. If you would like to get a dose of education yet before
falling asleep, be sure your tapes, TV or radio meet these conditions:
·
they turn
off automatically no later than in 30 minutes
·
they have
no ability to wake you up from a properly timed sleep. If you wake up from
initial minutes of sleep you may experience a dramatic shift in the homeostatic
component that would delay the sleep onset (awakening may also indicate that
you went to sleep too early in reference to your circadian cycle)
·
they do not
include highly emotional content, distressing messages, shrill sounds
(doorbells, phones, timers and alarm clocks; these have all been designed to
produce sounds that tend to most effectively rouse the central nervous system)
TV, radio or tapes in the morning are
OK too, on condition you turn them on manually (i.e. they should not work as an
alarm clock substitute). If you wake up slightly ahead of your expected waking
time, turn on the news and stay in bed. Test your brain for signs of
sleepiness. Occasionally, you may still be able to fall asleep and go through
one cycle of sleep that will be beneficial to your intellectual performance. Be
sure that this does not become a routine, esp. if you are awakened early due to
the pressure in the bladder[3]. Unless your urologist recommends otherwise, you should
avoid drinking water and other liquids 2-3 hours before going to sleep
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