Home Good to know Good to know : scientists study ‘hammock’ effect on sleep

Good to know : scientists study ‘hammock’ effect on sleep

0 0

A team of Swiss and French scientists  published a study on Monday that suggests the rocking motion of a hammock  improves sleep quality and helps people get to sleep faster.

The study included 12 male volunteers who were not habitual nappers but who  agreed to try an afternoon snooze on both a stationary bed and a rocking bed  while machines scanned their brains, eye and muscle movements.

Women were excluded from the study because the menstrual cycle can have an  effect on electroencephalogram (EEG) monitoring, the researchers said.

Two of the 12 men had to be left out of the final analysis because one had  a malfunctioning EEG and one experienced too much anxiety to fall asleep on  the day he was assigned to the stationary bed.    But the remaining 10 subjects fell asleep faster in the rocking bed than  they did in the still one and the quality of their 45-minute nap was deeper,  said the findings published in the journal Current Biology.

“We observed a faster transition to sleep in each and every subject in the  swinging condition, a result that supports the intuitive notion of  facilitation of sleep associated with this procedure,” said Michel Muhlethaler  of the University of Geneva.    “Surprisingly, we also observed a dramatic boosting of certain types of  sleep-related (brain wave) oscillations.”

A midway sleep stage known as N2, which includes no rapid eye movements and  usually makes up about half of a sound period of sleep, was observed to be  longer in the hammock-type bed.

“The rocking bed also had a lasting effect on brain activity, increasing  slow oscillations and bursts of activity known as sleep spindles. Those  effects are consistent with a more synchronized neural activity characteristic  of deeper sleep,” said the study.    Researchers hope to examine whether the hammock effect would be similar in  longer stretches of sleep, and would like to find out if it can be harnessed  to help people who suffer from insomnia.

Washington, June 20, 2011 (AFP)

Comments

comments