Emotions Run Amok in
Sleep-Deprived Brains
Charles Q. Choi
Special to LiveScience
LiveScience.com Mon Oct 22, 12:20 PM ET
Without sleep, the emotional centers of our brains dramatically overreact to
bad experiences, research now reveals.
"When we're sleep
deprived, it's really as if the brain is reverting to more primitive
behavior, regressing in terms of the control humans normally have over their
emotions," researcher Matthew Walker, a neuroscientist at the University of
California, Berkeley, told LiveScience.
Anyone who has ever gone
without a good night's sleep is aware that doing so can make a person
emotionally irrational. While past studies have revealed that sleep loss can
impair the immune system and brain processes such as learning and memory,
there has been surprisingly little research into why sleep deprivation
affects emotions, Walker said.
Walker and his
colleagues had 26 healthy volunteers either get normal sleep or get sleep
deprived, making them stay awake for roughly 35 hours. On the following day,
the researchers scanned brain activity in volunteers using functional
magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while they viewed 100 images. These
started off as emotionally neutral, such as photos of spoons or baskets, but
they became increasingly negative in tone over time—for instance, pictures
of attacking sharks or vipers.
"While we predicted that
the emotional centers of the brain would overreact after sleep deprivation,
we didn't predict they'd overreact as much as they did," Walker said. "They
became more than 60 percent more reactive to negative emotional stimuli.
That's a whopping increase—the emotional parts of the brain just seem to run
amok."
The researchers
pinpointed this hyperactive response to a shutdown of the prefrontal lobe, a
brain region that normally keeps emotions under control. This
structure is relatively new in human evolution, "and so it may not yet have
adapted ways to cope with certain biological extremes," Walker speculated.
"Human beings are one of the few species that really deprive themselves of
sleep. It's a real oddity in nature."
In modern life, people
often deprive themselves of sleep "almost on a daily basis," Walker said.
"Alarm bells should be ringing about that behavior—no pun intended."
Future research can
focus on which components of sleep help restore emotional stability—"whether
it's dreaming REM sleep or slow-wave, non-dreaming forms of sleep," Walker
said.
Many psychiatric
disorders, "particularly ones involving emotions, seem to be linked with
abnormal sleep," he added. "Traditionally people mostly thought the
psychiatric disorders were contributing to the sleep abnormalities, but of
course it could be the other way around. If we can find out which parts of
sleep are most key to emotional stability, we already have a good range of
drugs that can push and pull at these kinds of sleep and maybe help treat
certain kinds of psychiatric conditions."
The findings are
detailed in the Oct. 23 issue of the journal Current Biology.
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