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Would it upset you to find out you had a chronic brain condition
that causes you to lose consciousness for many hours at a time
and periodically experience paralysis and hallucinations?
What I've described are the symptoms of sleep.
If you live to be 80, you will spend around 26 years of your life in this state.
Yet scientists still don't agree on why.
Some say we shouldn't ask why we sleep,
but why we are awake when we don't need to be,
using precious energy and possibly getting into trouble.
The big brown bat is only awake for around 4 hours just after the dusk.
which maximizes its chances of eating and
minimizes its chances of being eaten.
But large herbivores have to spend a lot of time foraging
and have a few places to hide.
So they can't afford to sleep for more than a few hours a day.
If there is some universal function of sleep,
a goat somehow accomplishes it in 5 hours,
a tiger in 15 and a dolphin with one eye open.
Still there's plenty of evidence that
slumber is more than just than laying low.
The whole host of body functions are enhanced during sleep.
From tissue repair,
to immune function,
to blood sugar control.
But the most immediate consequence of
sleep deprivation is that
we can't think as well.
Studies show that people who sleep
before and after learning something new
perform better on tests on memory
and problem solving.
This may indicate that
sleeping brain reinforces and archives new memories.
But there's also evidence that
sleep weakens the connections
between brain cells, in a way that
it keeps important information,
while reducing the clutter.
But how exactly this happens remains unknown.
And it doesn't explain
why some animals sleep much longer than others.
Ultimately, some combination of these ideas
would probably explain why
we spend a third of lives unconscious.
For Scientific American's Instant Egghead, I'm Joss Fong.