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Monday, 9 September 2013

Must Read:The Misery Behind Sleep

We know we need it. If we don't get it, we're cranky, have trouble concentrating, tend to overeat and are more likely to make mistakes.  Yet, with the crush of demanding schedules, bad habits, or sleep disturbances, we don't always get enough.

So what is happening during those precious hours when we're asleep?  Is it really a time of restoration for our brains?  And is it possible that it's more than that?

What happens in our brains while we're asleep is a question neuroscientist Penelope Lewis is trying to answer.

Lewis directs the Sleep and Memory Lab at the University of Manchester in England. In her new book, The Secret World of Sleep: The Surprising Science of the Mind at Rest, she discusses how sleep makes memory stronger, provides what she terms "spring cleaning" for the brain, and plays a role in depression.

How Sleep Strengthens Memory

Have you ever had an experience in which you're practicing a particular skill, say playing the piano, a golf swing or a new language? You go to bed tired and wake up to find you seem to have improved. You're able to play the piano piece more smoothly, your golf swing has straightened out or the words in the new language come more easily.

What happens when we sleep, Lewis says in an interview on National Public Radio, is that "the neural responses in your brain that are associated with things you've recently experienced are spontaneously replayed, or, we say, 'reactivated' while you're asleep."

And it is this reactivation that occurs during sleep that strengthens our memory.  Our brains are, in effect, practicing while we sleep.  Take playing the piano, for example. If during the day you moved your fingers to play a particular piece, the associated motor areas of your brain would become active while you sleep.

According to Lewis, neuroscientific inquiry is beginning to determine which skills improve with sleep and how such consolidation occurs in the brain.

What is "Spring Cleaning" for the Brain?

During our waking hours, we encounter a huge array of sensory information. We are constantly hearing, seeing, smelling, feeling and tasting.  And we have thoughts and feelings about this wide range of sensory experiences. For example, on any given day, by breakfast you may have heard your alarm and thought to yourself that it's too loud; felt the warmth of the shower and noted a need to buy more soap; scrubbed the tiles or fixed a dripping faucet.  You may have noted the feel of certain clothing and had any number of thoughts about your closet and the clothes available to you, all while listening to the radio, taking in news stories, noting a favorite song and mentally rehearsing for what the day ahead entails.

The point is that we are bombarded with sensory information all day long. According to Lewis in the interview on National Public Radio, "while we're busy doing things, experiencing things, seeing things, hearing things, learning things, processing different kinds of information, the connections between neurons in the brain get strengthened because they're trying to retain all of this information. And an awful lot of it is garbage; it's stuff you don't want to remember or don't care about — what you had for breakfast, or the color of a stain on the cover of a book or something. It's really not useful or interesting."

If we don't filter out some of this information, our brains become overloaded.  We must have a way to sort through the information we receive during the day, storing and consolidating what is important and letting the rest go.  That process, Lewis says, happens during sleep.  During the deep stage of what is called slow-wave sleep, synapses get downscaled again, according to Lewis.  This allows us to recall the salient aspects of our day, without being overwhelmed by unimportant details.

Sleep and Depression

Sleep, specifically REM sleep when we dream, has recently been connected to depressive episodes.  REM sleep is associated with strengthening emotional memories.  When someone is depressed, their emotional experiences during the day tend to be sad, miserable and depressed.

According to Hornung and colleagues, people who are depressed show drastic increases in REM. These depressed people also are biased toward negative memories. Recent research on antidepressant drugs has found that antidepressants correct the imbalance of REM sleep, while at the same time improving mood.  The correlation between improved mood and suppression of REM sleep suggests that negative memories strengthened during REM sleep may play a role in maintaining depression.

We spend as much as a third of our lives asleep.  Understanding what happens during sleep, how our brain processes information during sleep and how it serves a restorative function can help us to improve how we learn and determine how to treat emotional and cognitive problems that may be related to sleep.

Must Read:The Misteries Behind Sleep

We know we need it. If we don't get it, we're cranky, have trouble concentrating, tend to overeat and are more likely to make mistakes.  Yet, with the crush of demanding schedules, bad habits, or sleep disturbances, we don't always get enough.

So what is happening during those precious hours when we're asleep?  Is it really a time of restoration for our brains?  And is it possible that it's more than that?

What happens in our brains while we're asleep is a question neuroscientist Penelope Lewis is trying to answer.

Lewis directs the Sleep and Memory Lab at the University of Manchester in England. In her new book, The Secret World of Sleep: The Surprising Science of the Mind at Rest, she discusses how sleep makes memory stronger, provides what she terms "spring cleaning" for the brain, and plays a role in depression.

How Sleep Strengthens Memory

Have you ever had an experience in which you're practicing a particular skill, say playing the piano, a golf swing or a new language? You go to bed tired and wake up to find you seem to have improved. You're able to play the piano piece more smoothly, your golf swing has straightened out or the words in the new language come more easily.

What happens when we sleep, Lewis says in an interview on National Public Radio, is that "the neural responses in your brain that are associated with things you've recently experienced are spontaneously replayed, or, we say, 'reactivated' while you're asleep."

And it is this reactivation that occurs during sleep that strengthens our memory.  Our brains are, in effect, practicing while we sleep.  Take playing the piano, for example. If during the day you moved your fingers to play a particular piece, the associated motor areas of your brain would become active while you sleep.

According to Lewis, neuroscientific inquiry is beginning to determine which skills improve with sleep and how such consolidation occurs in the brain.

What is "Spring Cleaning" for the Brain?

During our waking hours, we encounter a huge array of sensory information. We are constantly hearing, seeing, smelling, feeling and tasting.  And we have thoughts and feelings about this wide range of sensory experiences. For example, on any given day, by breakfast you may have heard your alarm and thought to yourself that it's too loud; felt the warmth of the shower and noted a need to buy more soap; scrubbed the tiles or fixed a dripping faucet.  You may have noted the feel of certain clothing and had any number of thoughts about your closet and the clothes available to you, all while listening to the radio, taking in news stories, noting a favorite song and mentally rehearsing for what the day ahead entails.

The point is that we are bombarded with sensory information all day long. According to Lewis in the interview on National Public Radio, "while we're busy doing things, experiencing things, seeing things, hearing things, learning things, processing different kinds of information, the connections between neurons in the brain get strengthened because they're trying to retain all of this information. And an awful lot of it is garbage; it's stuff you don't want to remember or don't care about — what you had for breakfast, or the color of a stain on the cover of a book or something. It's really not useful or interesting."

If we don't filter out some of this information, our brains become overloaded.  We must have a way to sort through the information we receive during the day, storing and consolidating what is important and letting the rest go.  That process, Lewis says, happens during sleep.  During the deep stage of what is called slow-wave sleep, synapses get downscaled again, according to Lewis.  This allows us to recall the salient aspects of our day, without being overwhelmed by unimportant details.

Sleep and Depression

Sleep, specifically REM sleep when we dream, has recently been connected to depressive episodes.  REM sleep is associated with strengthening emotional memories.  When someone is depressed, their emotional experiences during the day tend to be sad, miserable and depressed.

According to Hornung and colleagues, people who are depressed show drastic increases in REM. These depressed people also are biased toward negative memories. Recent research on antidepressant drugs has found that antidepressants correct the imbalance of REM sleep, while at the same time improving mood.  The correlation between improved mood and suppression of REM sleep suggests that negative memories strengthened during REM sleep may play a role in maintaining depression.

We spend as much as a third of our lives asleep.  Understanding what happens during sleep, how our brain processes information during sleep and how it serves a restorative function can help us to improve how we learn and determine how to treat emotional and cognitive problems that may be related to sleep.

Chelsea Player Walks Out On National Team, Leaves Team Hotel After Disagreement.

New Chelsea signing Samuel Eto'o has walked out on the Cameroon national team after their 1-0 victory over Libya. The forward told his team mates that he was leaving the group and he didn't return to the hotel with the rest of the squad.

Their win over Libya today meant they clinched the final qualifying spot for the play offs for next year's World Cup in Brazil. French newspaper L'Equipe reported that Eto'o had told the team he was leaving the squad for personal reasons and he wouldn't be coming back with them. According to L'Equipe he wanted the national coach to select players he felt should be in the team but the manager didn't back down. The situation was so bad that they had to bring in the country's sports minister to solve the problem but to no avail.

It has been reported the player hasn't trained all week with Cameroon as they prepared for the crucial game against Libya. It's not known if this is the end for Eto'o and Cameroon but it's certainly not the first time he's had disagreements with those in charge of the national team.

He's even been quoted slating team mates. In October, Sky Sports found quotes of him reacting badly to being compared to Alex Song and suggestions there was a rivalry between the pair "We are not involved in a conflict between two star players.

"I am among the best players in the world and Song is not even among the best players in Cameroon."

If this is the end for Eto'o and Cameroon, and that would be unlikely with the World Cup on the horizon, then it could suit Chelsea. What could suit both is him only being available for matches he wishes to play in, dependent on what Cameroon would make of that. Whether they'll let him pick the team, as he seems to think he should be able to, is another matter entirely.

Mikel, Moses To Miss Burkina faso Friendly

John Mikel Obi and Victor Moses will not be part of Tuesday's friendly international against Burkina Faso in Kaduna.

Both players asked for permission and were excused by coach Stephen Keshi after Saturday's 2-0 win over Malawi.

The duo were not part of the squad that left Calabar on Sunday morning for Kaduna via Abuja.

It is unclear as yet if Keshi will call up any replacements or stick with the 21 players currently en route to Kaduna.

Moses recently joined Liverpool on loan from Chelsea