How can some sleepers doze through anything from the rattle of a jackhammer to the blast of a jet engine? According to a new study, an extra helping of brain activity in the thalamus–a region tied to the senses–may give some people a better chance at blocking sleep-disturbing sounds.
“I hear complaints a lot as a sleep doctor that noises are interrupting people’s sleep all the time,’’ said Dr. Jeffrey M. Ellenbogen, chief of the division of sleep medicine at Harvard Medical School [and co-author of the study]. “What is it in the brain that makes it have less response to noise at night, and how can we enhance that natural occurring brain-based process to help people sleep?” he said. [The New York Times]
Researchers at the Harvard Medical School asked twelve healthy volunteers to spend three nights in a sleep lab. The first night the researchers let them sleep soundly, but monitored their brain activity. The following two nights, they used four speakers aimed at the sleepers’ heads to play sounds of air and car traffic, ringing telephones, and “hospital-based mechanical sounds,” among other things. They found that those people whose thalami produced more high-frequency signals called “sleep spindles” lasted the longest when barraged with noises: the more sleep spindles, apparently, the better the sleep. The study appears today in Current Biology.
The correlation between sleep spindles–so called because the brain wave pattern looks like spindles of thread–and deeper sleep doesn’t necessarily mean causation, but the team suggests that the mechanism that produces the spindles in the thalamus could be “colliding” with the incoming sounds. This would prevent the sensory information from being passed on to the rest of the cortex, and could allow sleepers to get their shut-eye despite a noisy background. The New York Times reports that older people produce fewer sleep spindles, and notes that people often become lighter sleepers as they age. The researchers wonder if the number of spindles may serve as a good prediction for deep sleep capabilities:
In the meantime, testing a person’s spindle activity may help predict an individual’s tolerance to noise, Ellenbogen added. This could help with life decisions, he said, such as: “Should I take the job that puts me in the city, where I’m [in] urban chaos?” [National Geographic]
The researchers also question if this line of research will change how leading sleep medications are manufactured, since sedating the brain (as many current sleep aids do) means sedating the thalamus, the sleep spindle-maker.
“Although our computer vernacular uses ’sleep’ to refer to a process of temporary shut-down, that’s not the way our brain works,” Ellenbogen wrote in an email to Wired.com. “During sleep, our neurons are busy doing very complicated processing, including, this study shows, generating sleep spindles to protect us from being awoken from noises in the environment.” [Wired]
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Image: flickr / davitydave


Keith's 2:22 PM EDT update: According to a family source both Sean O'Keefe and his son Kevin survived the plane crash - but they are both rather banged up. In an earlier post I stated that his son Jonathan was on the plane. He was not on the plane. Instead it was his brother Kevin who made the flight. Sean O'Keefe suffered a broken pelvis and I believe that Kevin has a broken leg.
Keith's 2:22 PM EDT update: According to a family source both Sean O'Keefe and his son Kevin survived the plane crash - but they are both rather banged up. In an earlier post I stated that his son Jonathan was on the plane. He was not.

Keith's note: One of the participants in this evening's reception in Washington, DC after the NEO conference was a NASA field center director. Given that he recently had some foot surgery and is not supposed to travel, he used an avatar instead. The center director? Why ARC's Pete Worden, of course. His avatar of choice was an "
As the Senate approved a measure to compromise various political plans that would impact the Space Coast region, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke paid his third visit to the area. This time it was to speak to KSC employees facing unemployment and to tour the space center's facilities. An Atlas V is scheduled to launch the first AEHF-1 satellite on August 12. That same day NASA will host an event that will display the upcoming STS-133 mission's payload. Back over at KSC, elements for the final two scheduled shuttle missions were coming into place.
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, left, and Rep. Suzanne Kosmas learn about research taking place in the Space Life Sciences Lab. As part of Locke's visit to Kennedy a meeting also was held with about a dozen workers expected to lose their jobs with the retirement of the Space Shuttle Program to discuss what the Commerce Department, NASA and the White House are doing to improve the local economy as the program winds down. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett
One of space shuttle Endeavour's two solid rocket booster forward assemblies were transported from the Assembly Refurbishment Facility to the Vehicle Assembly Building. Endeavour and its STS-134 crew are targeted to deliver the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, as well as critical spare components, to the International Space Station next year. Photo credit: NASA/Jack Pfaller




