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During this brief Stage 1 sleep, you may experience fantastic images resembling
                                                                               hallucinations — sensory experiences that occur without a sensory stimulus. You may
               TEACH 1.5-5                                                   have a sensation of falling (when your body may suddenly jerk) or of floating weightlessly.
                                                                             These hypnagogic sensations (also called hypnic sensations) may later be incorporated
               Teaching Tip                                                  into your memories. People who claim aliens abducted them — often shortly after getting
               Students have likely experienced hyp-                         into bed — commonly recall being floated off (or pinned down on) their beds (Clancy, 2005;
                                                                             McNally, 2012). To catch your own hypnagogic experiences, you might use your alarm’s
               nagogic sensations as they have fallen                        snooze function.
               asleep. Ask students if they have ever                          You then relax more deeply and begin about 20 minutes of Stage 2 sleep, with its peri-
               jerked awake as they dozed off. If they                       odic sleep spindles — bursts of rapid, rhythmic brain-wave activity that aid memory process-
                                                                             ing (Studte et al., 2017). Although you could still be awakened without too much difficulty,
               have, they may recall what they were                          you are now clearly asleep.
               dreaming about at that moment—                                  Then you transition to the deep sleep of Stage 3. During this slow-wave sleep, which
               perhaps tripping on a sidewalk or                             lasts for about 30 minutes, your brain emits large, slow delta waves and you are hard to
                                                                             awaken. Have you ever said, “That thunder was so loud last night!” only to have a friend
               falling from a chair. Their dream                             respond, “What thunder?”  Those who missed the storm may have been in delta sleep. (It is
                 experience is translated into behav-                        at the end of this stage that children may wet the bed.)
               ior since they are not fully into REM                         REM Sleep
               sleep.                                                        About an hour after you first fall asleep, a strange thing happens. Rather than continu-
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                                                                             ing in deep slumber, you ascend from your initial sleep dive. Returning through Stage 2
               TEACH 1.5-5                                                   (where you’ll ultimately spend about half your night), you enter the most intriguing sleep
                                                                             phase — REM (R) sleep. For about 10 minutes, your brain waves become rapid and saw-
               Teaching Tip                                                  toothed, more like those of the nearly awake Stage 1 sleep. But unlike in Stage 1, during REM
                                                                             sleep your heart rate rises, your breathing becomes rapid and irregular, and every half-minute
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               Students may need help understand-                            or so your eyes dart around in momentary bursts of activity behind closed lids. These eye
               ing why REM is sometimes called                               movements announce the beginning of a dream — often emotional, usually story-like, and
               paradoxical sleep. A paradox is                               richly hallucinatory. Dreams aren’t real, but REM sleep tricks your brain into responding as if
                                                                             they were (Andrillon et al., 2015). Because anyone watching a sleeper’s eyes can notice these
               something that seems to contradict                            REM bursts, it is amazing that science was ignorant of REM sleep until 1952.
               itself. It seems illogical for your brain                       Except during very scary dreams, your genitals become aroused during REM sleep. You
               to be so active while it is asleep, but                       may have an erection or increased vaginal lubrication, regardless of whether the dream’s
                                                                             content is sexual (Karacan et al., 1966). Men’s common “morning erection” stems from the
               this is true during REM. When we are                          night’s last REM period, often just before waking.
                                                                               During REM sleep, your brain’s motor cortex is active, but your brainstem blocks its
               at our most relaxed physically, we are                        messages. This leaves your muscles relaxed — so much so that except for an occasional
               experiencing one of our most active                           finger, toe, or facial twitch, you are essentially paralyzed. (This immobility may occa-
               times mentally.                                               sionally linger as you awaken from REM sleep, producing the disturbing experience of
                                                                             sleep paralysis [Santomauro & French, 2009].) Moreover, you cannot easily be awakened.
                                                         hallucinations  false sensory
                                                         experiences, such as seeing   REM sleep is thus sometimes called paradoxical sleep: The body is internally aroused, with
                                                         something in the absence of an   waking-like brain activity, yet asleep and externally calm. We spend about 600 hours a
                                                         external visual stimulus.  year experiencing some 1500 dreams, or more than 100,000 dreams over a typical life-
                                                         hypnagogic sensations     time — dreams swallowed  by the  night but  not  acted  out,  thanks  to  REM’s protective
                                                         bizarre experiences, such as   paralysis.
                                                         jerking or a feeling of falling   The sleep cycle repeats itself about every 90 minutes for younger adults (with shorter,
                                                         or floating weightlessly, while   more frequent cycles for older adults). As the night wears on, deep Stage 3 sleep grows
                                                         transitioning to sleep. (Also
                                                         called hypnic sensations.)  shorter and disappears. The REM and Stage 2 sleep periods get longer (Figure  1.5-7).
                                                         delta waves  the large, slow   By morning, we have spent 20 to 25 percent of an average night’s sleep — some
                                                         brain waves associated with deep   100  minutes — in REM sleep. In sleep lab studies, 37 percent of participants have reported
                                                         sleep.              rarely or never having dreams that they “can remember the next morning” (Moore, 2004).
                                                                             Yet even they, more than 80 percent of the time, could recall a dream after being awakened

                                                        96   Unit 1  Biological Bases of Behavior




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               96   Unit 1  Biological Bases of Behavior






          03_HammerTE4e_47547_ch01_2a_163_4pp.indd   96                                                                         07/02/24   5:24 PM
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