New research from MIT reveals that when sleep-deprived individuals experience attention lapses, their brains trigger waves of cerebrospinal fluid to clear waste, mimicking a sleep-like process. This compensation disrupts focus temporarily but may help maintain brain health. The findings, published in Nature Neuroscience, highlight the brain's adaptive response to missed rest.
Everyone has felt the fog of exhaustion after a poor night's sleep, with focus drifting and reactions slowing. A recent MIT study uncovers the neurological mechanism behind these lapses, showing that the brain initiates a cleansing process normally reserved for sleep.
Led by Laura Lewis, an associate professor at MIT's Institute for Medical Engineering and Science, the research involved 26 volunteers tested twice: once after sleep deprivation and once after restful sleep. Participants underwent attention tasks inside an fMRI scanner while wearing an EEG cap, with additional monitoring of heart rate, breathing, and pupil size. In visual tests, they pressed a button when a cross on a screen turned into a square; in auditory tests, they responded to sounds.
Sleep-deprived participants showed slower reactions and missed cues more often. During these failures, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flowed outward from the brain, then returned as attention recovered. This fluid movement, which flushes out daily waste buildup, typically occurs rhythmically during sleep, as noted in a prior 2019 study by Lewis's team.
"If you don't sleep, the CSF waves start to intrude into wakefulness where normally you wouldn't see them. However, they come with an attentional tradeoff, where attention fails during the moments that you have this wave of fluid flow," Lewis explained.
The lapses also involved bodily changes: breathing and heart rates slowed, and pupils constricted about 12 seconds before CSF outflow. Lead author Zinong Yang suggested, "Your brain's fluid system is trying to restore function by pushing the brain to iterate between high-attention and high-flow states."
These insights point to a unified system linking attention, fluid dynamics, and physiological processes, possibly involving the noradrenergic system. While not identifying the exact circuit, the study underscores sleep's role in brain maintenance and the costs of deprivation.