Department of Veterinary Integrative Biosciences, Texas A&M University , College Station, TX, USA.
Front Syst Neurosci. 2011 Sep 6;5:73. doi: 10.3389/fnsys.2011.00073. eCollection 2011.
Brain activity differs in the various sleep stages and in conscious wakefulness. Awakening from sleep requires restoration of the complex nerve impulse patterns in neuronal network assemblies necessary to re-create and sustain conscious wakefulness. Herein I propose that the brain uses rapid eye movement (REM) to help wake itself up after it has had a sufficient amount of sleep. Evidence suggesting this hypothesis includes the facts that, (1) when first going to sleep, the brain plunges into Stage N3 (formerly called Stage IV), a deep abyss of sleep, and, as the night progresses, the sleep is punctuated by episodes of REM that become longer and more frequent toward morning, (2) conscious-like dreams are a reliable component of the REM state in which the dreamer is an active mental observer or agent in the dream, (3) the last awakening during a night's sleep usually occurs in a REM episode during or at the end of a dream, (4) both REM and awake consciousness seem to arise out of a similar brainstem ascending arousal system (5) N3 is a functionally perturbed state that eventually must be corrected so that embodied brain can direct adaptive behavior, and (6) cortico-fugal projections to brainstem arousal areas provide a way to trigger increased cortical activity in REM to progressively raise the sleeping brain to the threshold required for wakefulness. This paper shows how the hypothesis conforms to common experience and has substantial predictive and explanatory power regarding the phenomenology of sleep in terms of ontogeny, aging, phylogeny, abnormal/disease states, cognition, and behavioral physiology. That broad range of consistency is not matched by competing theories, which are summarized herein. Specific ways to test this wake-up hypothesis are suggested. Such research could lead to a better understanding of awake consciousness.
大脑在不同的睡眠阶段和清醒状态下的活动方式不同。从睡眠中醒来需要恢复神经元网络集合中复杂的神经冲动模式,以重新创造和维持清醒意识。在这里,我提出大脑利用快速眼动(REM)来帮助自己在有足够的睡眠时间后醒来。支持这一假设的证据包括以下事实:(1)当刚开始入睡时,大脑会陷入 N3 期(以前称为第 IV 期),这是一个深度睡眠的深渊,随着夜晚的进行,睡眠会被 REM 期打断,这些 REM 期在凌晨时变得更长、更频繁;(2)类似于意识的梦境是 REM 状态的可靠组成部分,在这种状态下,梦者是梦境中的主动心理观察者或代理人;(3)夜间睡眠的最后一次醒来通常发生在 REM 期的一次或在梦境结束时;(4)REM 和清醒意识似乎都源自相似的脑干上行唤醒系统;(5)N3 是一种功能失调的状态,最终必须得到纠正,以便有身体的大脑能够指导适应性行为;(6)皮质向脑干唤醒区域的投射提供了一种在 REM 中触发皮质活动增加的方法,以逐步将睡眠中的大脑提升到清醒所需的阈值。本文展示了这一假设如何符合常见的经验,并在从个体发生、衰老、系统发生、异常/疾病状态、认知和行为生理学等方面对睡眠的现象学具有重要的预测和解释能力。这种广泛的一致性与竞争理论不匹配,本文对这些竞争理论进行了总结。还提出了测试这一唤醒假设的具体方法。此类研究可以帮助我们更好地理解清醒意识。