Matt Walker: Sleep is your superpower
马特·沃克: 睡眠是你的超能力
Matt Walker is a brain scientist trying to understand why we sleep. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
to start with testicles.
than those who sleep seven hours or more.
有着更小的睾丸。
just four to five hours a night
四到五个小时的男性,
10 years their senior.
will age a man by a decade
aspect of wellness.
in female reproductive health
that I have for you today.
about the wonderfully good things
that happen when you don't get enough,
发生在你们大脑和身体上的
over the past 10 or so years
on those new memories
that you also need sleep before learning
你也需要睡眠,
new information.
the memory circuits of the brain
waterlogged, as it were,
to test the hypothesis
这么一个假设,
was a good idea.
to one of two experimental groups:
and a sleep deprivation group.
a full eight hours of slumber,
we're going to keep them awake
在全程监控下,
so it's miserable for everyone involved.
所以确实很痛苦。
inside an MRI scanner
try and learn a whole list of new facts
of brain activity.
that learning has been.
here on the vertical axis.
those two groups head to head,
40-percent deficit
to make new memories without sleep.
有40%的显著差距。
is happening to sleep
in a child acing an exam
what goes wrong within your brain
到底哪里出错
of learning disabilities.
of your brain, called the hippocampus.
inbox of your brain.
new memory files
a full night of sleep,
learning-related activity.
与学习相关的大脑活动。
who were sleep-deprived,
any significant signal whatsoever.
had shut down your memory inbox,
they were just being bounced.
commit new experiences to memory.
if I were to take sleep away from you,
会发生的糟糕事情,
to that control group for a second.
that got a full eight hours of sleep?
a very different question:
quality of your sleep
your memory and learning ability
all over the head,
is that there are big, powerful brainwaves
the very deepest stages of sleep
of electrical activity
of these deep-sleep brainwaves
mechanism at night,
vulnerable reservoir
易受遗忘的存储库
storage site within the brain,
的长期存储库,
making them safe.
使它们不至受损。
these memory benefits,
and societal implications.
out into, clinically,
and dementia.
that, as we get older,
我们的学习和记忆能力
begin to fade and decline.
并不是什么秘密。
is that your sleep gets worse,
你的睡眠质量变差了,
that I was just discussing.
深度睡眠质量中。
we finally published evidence
they're not simply co-occurring,
不是简单的同时发生,
that the disruption of deep sleep
to cognitive decline or memory decline
we've discovered,
depressing news.
silver lining here.
that we know are associated with aging,
有关的因素不同的是,
in the physical structure of the brain,
in the explanatory puzzle
阿尔茨海默症谜题中
to do something about it.
approaching this at my sleep center
sleeping pills, by the way.
that do not produce naturalistic sleep.
不能产生自然主义的睡眠。
a method based on this.
brain stimulation.
of voltage into the brain,
during sleep in young, healthy adults,
成人睡眠时采用这种刺激,
with those deep-sleep brainwaves,
the size of those deep-sleep brainwaves,
double the amount of memory benefit
is whether we can translate
potentially portable piece of technology
some healthy quality of deep sleep,
aspects of their learning
能否挽救他们的学习
goals, as it were.
of sleep for your brain,
as essential for your body.
and your reproductive system.
和生殖系统的关系。
and your cardiovascular system,
和你的心血管系统,
performed on 1.6 billion people
when we lose one hour of sleep,
in heart attacks that following day.
心脏病发作会增加24%。
when we gain an hour of sleep,
reduction in heart attacks.
for car crashes, road traffic accidents,
I want to focus on this:
blue elements in the image.
这些明亮的蓝色元素。
almost like the secret service agents
想象成你免疫系统中的
dangerous, unwanted elements
is destroying a cancerous tumor mass.
摧毁一个癌变的肿瘤团块。
is a virile set of these immune assassins
if you're not sleeping enough.
你不能拥有它们。
deprived for an entire night,
restricted to four hours
what's the percent reduction
in natural killer cell activity.
of immune deficiency,
why we're now finding
我们现在发现的
short sleep duration
of numerous forms of cancer.
cancer of the bowel,
and cancer of the breast.
and cancer is now so strong
之间的联系是如此紧密,
of nighttime shift work
of your sleep-wake rhythms.
across millions of individuals.
研究中了解到这一点。
the shorter your life.
for the development of cancer
that a lack of sleep will even erode
they took a group of healthy adults
找来一群健康的成年人,
to six hours of sleep a night
in their gene activity profile
of sleep a night.
显著的711个基因的活动
was that about half of those genes
by a lack of sleep
with your immune system,
that immune deficiency.
that were actually upregulated
with the promotion of tumors,
chronic inflammation within the body,
cardiovascular disease.
相关的基因。
of sleep deprivation
water pipe in your home.
into every nook and cranny
the very DNA nucleic alphabet
your daily health narrative.
how do I start to get better sleep?
the damaging and harmful impact
with sleep at night,
wake up at the same time,
it's the weekday or the weekend.
and the quality of that sleep.
its core temperature
Fahrenheit to initiate sleep
you will always find it easier
of around 65 degrees,
在65华氏度左右,
for the sleep of most people.
in taking a step back, then,
statement here?
is not an optional lifestyle luxury.
可选的奢侈的生活方式。
biological necessity.
best effort yet at immortality.
throughout industrialized nations
on our health, our wellness,
幸福,甚至安全
of our children.
public health challenges
21世纪面临的其中一个
to reclaim our right
with the most powerful elixir of life,
最强大的长生不老药
of health, as it were.
Stay there for a second.
I appreciate that.
DB: Yes, thank you, thank you.
大卫·比洛:谢谢,谢谢。
what are we supposed to do?
tossing and turning in bed late at night
轮班工作或因为其他事情时,
we can't catch up on sleep.
at a later point in time.
that it's so catastrophic
deteriorates so quickly,
are the only species
themselves of sleep
because it means that Mother Nature,
of this thing called sleep deprivation.
both within the brain and the body.
awake for too long,
and go to a different room
will very quickly associate your bedroom
the association that you once had,
waiting to get hungry,
waiting to get sleepy?
Thank you very much.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Matt Walker - Sleep scientist, professor, authorMatt Walker is a brain scientist trying to understand why we sleep.
Why you should listen
Matt Walker's research examines the impact of sleep on human health and disease. He got his PhD from the Medical Research Council in London, UK, and subsequently became a Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. He's currently a Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley, and Director of the Center for Human Sleep Science.
Walker has received funding awards from the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health, and he's a Kavli Fellow of the National Academy of Sciences. He has shared his research on the importance of sleep on television and radio outlets including CBS's "60 Minutes," National Geographic, NOVA Science, NRP and the BBC. He is the author of the international bestseller Why We Sleep.
Matt Walker | Speaker | TED.com