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deprivation stirs up emotions |
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Sleep Deprivation Stirs Up Emotions
Study explains why lack of sleep may lead to
irrational behavior.
By Jennifer Warner WebMD Medical News
Sleep deprivation may make it harder to keep
your emotions in check.
A new study shows that sleep deprivation is
linked to a disconnect in the part of the brain
responsible for keeping emotions under control,
adding to the already long list of negative
effects of lack of sleep on health.
Researchers say the results are the first to
explain on a scientific level how lack of sleep
may lead to emotionally irrational behavior.
"It's almost as though, without sleep, the brain
had reverted back to more primitive patterns of
activity, in that it was unable to put emotional
experiences into context and produce controlled,
appropriate responses," says researcher Matthew
Walker, director of the University of
California, Berkeley's Sleep and Neuroimaging
Laboratory, in a news release.
"You can see it in the reaction of a military
combatant soldier dealing with a civilian, a
tired mother to a meddlesome toddler, the
medical resident to a pushy patient. It's these
everyday scenarios that tell us people don't get
enough sleep," says Walker.
Lack of Sleep Affects Emotions
In the study, published in Current Biology,
researchers examined the effects of lack of
sleep on 26 healthy adults. Half were assigned
to a sleep deprivation group and were kept awake
for 35 hours, and the other half slept normally.
The participants' brains were then scanned using
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
while they looked at 100 different images,
ranging from emotionally neutral to negative,
such as mutilated bodies and other gory images.
The results showed that the sleep-deprived group
had a much bigger reaction to the emotionally
charged images. The brain scans showed that the
amygdala, the area of the brain critical to
processing emotions, appeared to overreact to
the gory images in the sleep-deprived group
compared with the normal activity found in the
normal-sleep group.
"The size of the increase truly surprised us,"
says Walker. "The emotional centers of the brain
were over 60% more reactive under conditions of
sleep deprivation than in subjects who had
obtained a normal night of sleep.
"Sleep appears to restore our emotional brain
circuits, and in doing so prepares us for the
next day's challenges and social interactions,"
says Walker.
© WebMD Inc. All rights reserved.
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“Sleep appears to restore our emotional brain
circuits, and in doing so prepares us for the next
day's challenges and social interactions"
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