Division of Cognitive Biopsychology and Methods, Department of Psychology, University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
Sleep and Health Zurich, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
J Sleep Res. 2021 Jun;30(3):e13168. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13168. Epub 2020 Aug 17.
Slow-wave sleep is one of the most important restorative components of sleep and central for our health and cognitive functioning. Although the amount of slow-wave sleep depends on sleep drive, age and other factors, also the pre-sleep mental state might influence sleep depth. We had shown that a pre-sleep hypnotic suggestion to sleep more deeply increased slow-wave sleep duration in hypnotizable subjects. In contrast, low-hypnotizable participants decreased sleep depth after this intervention. A possible reason might be an aversion to and active resistance against hypnosis. To overcome this potential opposition, we introduced the procedure as 'guided imagery'. We replaced the hypnotic induction by a breathing relaxation. Importantly, the suggestion 'to sleep more deeply' remained identical. We expected that these changes would make it easier for low-hypnotizable subjects to benefit from the suggestion. In contrast, young healthy low-hypnotizable participants did not show positive effects. Similar to our previous studies, they exhibited a reduced slow-wave sleep duration after the intervention. Additionally, the ratio between slow-wave activity and beta band power decreased. Subjective sleep quality remained unaffected. Our results indicate that suggestions to sleep more deeply result in decreased sleep depth in low-hypnotizable participants regardless of the mental technique (guided imagery versus hypnosis). Thus, the aversion against hypnosis per se cannot explain the detrimental effect of the intervention on slow-wave sleep in low-hypnotizable subjects. The results support the notion that our mental state before sleep can influence subsequent slow-wave sleep. However, the mechanisms of the contradictory decrease in low-hypnotizable subjects remain unknown.
慢波睡眠是睡眠最重要的恢复性成分之一,对我们的健康和认知功能至关重要。虽然慢波睡眠时间取决于睡眠驱动力、年龄和其他因素,但睡前的心理状态也可能影响睡眠深度。我们曾表明,睡前催眠暗示深度睡眠会增加催眠易感性个体的慢波睡眠时间。相比之下,低催眠易感性参与者在这种干预后会降低睡眠深度。一个可能的原因是对催眠的厌恶和积极抵制。为了克服这种潜在的反对,我们将该程序称为“引导意象”。我们用呼吸放松代替催眠诱导。重要的是,“深度睡眠”的建议保持不变。我们预计这些变化将使低催眠易感性个体更容易从该建议中受益。然而,年轻健康的低催眠易感性参与者并没有表现出积极的效果。与我们之前的研究类似,他们在干预后表现出慢波睡眠时间减少。此外,慢波活动与β波段功率之间的比值降低。主观睡眠质量不受影响。我们的结果表明,深度睡眠的建议会导致低催眠易感性参与者的睡眠深度降低,无论使用的心理技术(引导意象与催眠)如何。因此,对催眠本身的厌恶不能解释该干预对低催眠易感性个体慢波睡眠的不利影响。结果支持这样一种观点,即我们睡前的心理状态可以影响随后的慢波睡眠。然而,低催眠易感性个体中相反的减少机制尚不清楚。