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Why REM sleep? Clues beyond the laboratory in a more challenging world

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 92, Issue 2, Pages 152-168

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsycho.2012.10.010

Keywords

REM sleep function; REM loss; Brain plasticity; Locomotion; Exploration; Epigenetics; Ecology; Behavioural adaptation; Humans; Mammals

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REM sleep (REM) seems more likely to prepare for ensuing wakefulness rather than provides recovery from prior wakefulness, as happens with 'deeper' nonREM. Many of REM's characteristics are 'wake-like' (unlike nonREM), including several common to feeding. These, with recent findings outside sleep, provide perspectives on REM beyond those from the laboratory. REM can interchange with a wakefulness involving motor output, indicating that REM's atonia is integral to its function. Wakefulness for 'wild' mammals largely comprises exploration; a complex opportunistic behaviour mostly for foraging, involving: curiosity, minimising risks, (emotional) coping, navigation, when (including circadian timing) to investigate new destinations; all linked to 'purposeful, goal directed movement'. REM reflects these adaptive behaviours (including epigenesis), masked in laboratories having constrained, safe, unchanging, unchallenging, featureless, exploration-free environments with ad lib food. Similarly masked may be REM's functions for today's humans living safe, routine lives, with easy food accessibility. In these respects animal and human REM studies are not sufficiently 'ecological'. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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