Wednesday 10 January 2018

evoln of sleep

why Mother Nature would program this variability across people. As a social species, should we not all be syn­chronized and therefore awake at the same time to promote maximal human interactions? Perhaps not. As we'll discover later in this book. humans likely evolved to co-sleep as families or even whole tribes, not alone or as couples. Appreciating this evolutionary context, the benefits of such genetically programmed variation in sleep/wake timing preferences can be understood. The night owls in the group would not be going to sleep until one or two a.m., and not waking until nine or ten a.m. The morning larks, on the other hand, would have retired for the night at nine p.m. and woken at five a.m. Conse­quently, the group as a whole is only collectively vulnerable (i.e., every person asleep) for just four rather than eight hours, despite everyone still getting the chance for eight hours of sleep. That's potentially 50 percent increase in survival fitness." 

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