Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Sleeping brain active even when you doze off

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Sep, 2014 08:29 AM
  • Sleeping brain active even when you doze off
Have you ever performed calculations or classified words before falling asleep and then experienced continuing those calculations during your snooze? Well, salute your wonder brain.
 
According to research, some parts of the brain are active irrespective of whether we are asleep or awake.
 
"When people practice simple word classification tasks before nodding off - knowing that a 'cat' is an animal or that 'aceflipu' is not found in the dictionary, for example - their brains will unconsciously continue to make those classifications even in sleep," explained Sid Kouider from the Ecole Normale Superieure (ENS) - a French higher education establishment outside the framework of the public university system.
 
In collaboration with the University of Cambridge, researchers recorded the EEG of human participants while they were awake and instructed them to classify spoken words as either animals or objects by pressing a button, using the right hand for animals and the left hand for objects.
 
The procedure allowed the team to map each word category to a specific plan for movement in the brain.
 
Once that process had become automatic, researchers placed participants in a darkened room to recline comfortably with eyes closed and continue the word classification task as they drifted off to sleep.
 
Once the participants were asleep, the testing continued but with an entirely new list of words to ensure that responses would require the extraction of word meaning rather than a simpler pairing between stimulus and response.
 
The researchers' observations of brain activity showed that the participants continued to respond accurately, although more slowly, even as they lay completely motionless and unaware.
 
"The findings showed that the sleeping brain can be far more active in sleep than one would think," Kouider added.
 
Far from falling into a limbo when we fall asleep, parts of our brain can routinely process what is going on in our surroundings and apply a relevant scheme of response.
 
"This explains some everyday life experiences such as our sensitivity to our name in our sleep, or to the specific sound of our alarm clock, compared to equally loud but less relevant sounds," researchers concluded.
 
The findings were reported in the Cell Press journal Current Biology.

MORE Health ARTICLES

Sperm-inspired microbots to deliver drugs

Sperm-inspired microbots to deliver drugs
Researchers, including an Indian-origin scientist, have developed sperm look-alike robots that can be used for drug delivery, in-vitro fertilisation (IVF), cell sorting and other applications at the microscopic level.

Sperm-inspired microbots to deliver drugs

Male contraceptive pill will have to wait

Male contraceptive pill will have to wait
The much speculated birth control pill for males may not see the light of day soon as researchers have found that hormonal male contraception via testosterone does not stop the production of healthy sperm.

Male contraceptive pill will have to wait

Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk

Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk
Are you on a strict diet to reduce body fat that may also help lower breast cancer risk? Better take up exercise as researchers have found that physical activity offers additional benefit, beyond the effect of weight loss in reducing cancer risk.

Exercise scores over diet in lowering breast cancer risk

Believe it! Men May Lactate Too

Believe it! Men May Lactate Too
Men may not be naturally wired to breast feed their babies but in certain circumstances, they may secrete milk too.

Believe it! Men May Lactate Too

Cat owners smarter than dog lovers?

Cat owners smarter than dog lovers?
Your pet can tell a lot about you and if a new study is to be believed, people with dogs at home are more energetic but feline lovers are more intelligent.

Cat owners smarter than dog lovers?

Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour

Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour
To get a blonde look, you soon may not need to visit a hair clinic or a specialist barber. A single-letter change in the genetic code is enough to generate blonde hair in humans, fascinating research shows.

Blonde or Brunette - single DNA change can decide hair colour