TEXT A How much sleep do we need
It is probably true to say that up to thirty years ago not only could we not
answer this question, but we could see no research tools which might eventually
enable us to do so. Since then, there have been important developments which
have changed the picture; in particular new forms and techniques of
neurophysiological measurement have emerged, and secondly, experimental
psychology has developed better methods of evaluating human performance and
behaviour. Studies, for example, of body and eye movements, of sensory
thresholds, and above all, of the electrical potentials of the brain during
sleep, encourage us to think that we may be able to assess with useful accuracy
the depth of quality of sleep. In carefully controlled experiments also the
amount of sleep has been carried to find the effects of lack of sleep upon
performance and upon physiological changes in the body, especially those which
accompany the effort to maintain normal behaviour and working standards in spite
of deprivation of sleep. There are some who think we can leave
the body to regulate these matters for itself. "The answer is easy," says the
authority. "With the right amount of sleep you should wake up fresh and alert
five minutes before the alarm rings." If he is right, many people must be under
sleeping, including myself. From animals we get the impression
that it is satiety rather than fatigue that promotes sleep; many of them appear
to Wake mainly to satisfy their bodily needs; during the rest of the time they
return to the negative state of sleep. This may be true for adult humans also,
hut with the important difference that their needs are often so complex and
long-term in nature that they can never be completely satisfied.
Other people feel sure that the current trend is towards too little sleep.
To quote one medical opinion, "Thousands of people drift through life suffering
from the effects of too little sleep; the reason is not that they can’t sleep
but that they just don’t." What could be disastrous is that we should sacrifice
sleep only to gain more time to jeopardize our civilization by actions and
decisions made weak by fatigue and neurosis. Then to complete
the picture, there are those who believe that most people are persuaded to sleep
too much. Dr. H. Roberts, writing in Everyman in Health, asserts: "It may safely
be affirmed that, just as the majority eat too much, so the majority sleep too
much." One can see the point of this also, it would be a pity to retard our
development by holding back those people who are gifted enough to work and play
well with less than the average amount of sleep, if indeed it does them no
harm. Of course, we are not sure. Not only are we unable to give
a formula for individual sleep requirement, we cannot even give confident
averages for the different age groups. This is because we have no substantial
scientific evidence to draw from, and opinions based on clinical evidence
present a picture which is too contradictory to be a dependable guide. Indirect
evidence on the amount of sleep we need comes from studies of what happens when
we do without it. At first sight these suggest that we do not need as much as we
take. It has been difficult to show any effect on performance of as little as
one night’s loss of sleep, and even after three days awake we can expect normal
efficiency in a man taking responsible decisions in a job which he finds really
absorbing and exciting. Furthermore, when at last he is allowed to sleep he will
probably wake after some twelve hours and show little, if any, ill-effect. These
laboratory observations are borne out by examples in everyday life. It
seems clear that the human body is equipped to over-ride the need for sleep in
order to meet emergencies of quite long duration with faculties unimpaired. But
this reversibility of the effect of loss of sleep in face of urgent and
absorbing demands may be the greatest source of danger. People may think they
are more efficient than they really are. According to the passage, which of the following contributes little to the study of sleep
A.Advancement in neurophysiological measurement. B.Improvement in experimental psychology. C.Studies of the electrical potentials of the brain. D.Experiments of physiological changes in the body.