MIT study links sleep deprivation to brain's cleanup causing attention lapses

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.

Articoli correlati

Scientific illustration of mouse abdominal muscle contraction transmitting pressure via spinal veins to induce subtle brain motion and cerebrospinal fluid circulation for waste removal.
Immagine generata dall'IA

Study links abdominal muscle contractions to subtle brain motion that may help circulate cerebrospinal fluid

Riportato dall'IA Immagine generata dall'IA Verificato

Penn State researchers report that tightening the abdominal muscles can transmit pressure through a vein network along the spine, causing the brain to shift slightly inside the skull in mice. The team says computer simulations suggest this motion could help drive cerebrospinal fluid flow that is thought to support waste removal, offering one possible mechanical explanation for why everyday movement and exercise are associated with brain health.

Researchers at Monash University have found that adults with ADHD experience more frequent episodes of sleep-like brain activity during wakefulness, which correlates with attention lapses. The study, published in the Journal of Neuroscience, links these brief shifts to errors, slower reactions, and increased sleepiness during tasks. Lead author Elaine Pinggal suggests this mechanism underlies attention difficulties in ADHD.

Riportato dall'IA

Researchers have found that vivid, immersive dreams can make sleep feel deeper and more restorative, even during periods of high brain activity. A study analyzing brain recordings from 44 healthy adults showed that participants reported their deepest sleep after intense dream experiences. The findings challenge traditional views of deep sleep as minimal brain activity.

Researchers at Emory University have discovered that excessive brain and muscle activity during minor balance disruptions contributes to poorer balance recovery in older adults, including those with Parkinson's disease. The study, published in eNeuro, reveals that trying harder to balance may actually increase fall risk. Opposing muscles stiffening simultaneously further impairs stability.

Riportato dall'IA

Researchers have found that repeated head impacts in contact sports damage the blood-brain barrier, potentially driving chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) in former athletes. The discovery, based on MRI scans of retired footballers, rugby players and boxers, suggests new diagnostic and preventive approaches. Drugs to strengthen the barrier may help avert the condition.

A new study shows that slowing breathing rates can reduce anxiety-like behaviors even without any conscious effort or belief in its effects. Researchers used mice to demonstrate that the benefits come from physiological changes rather than placebo. The findings were presented at a summit in Los Angeles earlier this month.

Riportato dall'IA

Researchers at the Institute of Science and Technology Austria have found that the brain's memory center, the hippocampus, begins life with a dense, seemingly random network of connections rather than a blank slate. This network refines itself through pruning, becoming more organized and efficient over time. The discovery challenges the traditional tabula rasa concept.

Questo sito web utilizza i cookie

Utilizziamo i cookie per l'analisi per migliorare il nostro sito. Leggi la nostra politica sulla privacy per ulteriori informazioni.
Rifiuta