Summary
9 October 2009
A recent study may have an answer to one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in science - what is the purpose of sleep? The work suggests it's actually about making animals function more efficiently in their environments.
Reporter:
Jon Stewart
Listen
Click to hear the report:
Report
Pythons, bats and giant armadillos are among the longest sleepers at over 18 hours a day. Human babies need 16 hours, and most of us probably feel we need around eight hours sleep to function well.
Professor Jerry Seigel from the University of California, Los Angeles, conducted a study of the sleep times of a broad range of animals and found that they vary widely. Some, like migrating birds, can survive long periods without sleeping at all. He believes that shows sleep evolved to conserve energy:
Jerry Seigel: 'It's animals that are needlessly active that will not survive, but animals that are most efficient and use their waking time to do vital functions, and are otherwise asleep that will survive.'
Sleep helps make best use of limited resources. In humans, when we're awake, our brain accounts for 20% of the energy we use when just sitting around. Sleeping also makes us less likely to get injured and less likely to be detected by predators.
Jon Stewart, 大象传媒 News
Listen
Click to hear the vocabulary:
Vocabulary
- to function well
to live and operate normally
- a broad range of
many different
- vary widely
are very different
- migrating birds
birds that move between two different environments in response to changes in weather and food supply
- to conserve
to save, to keep and protect from waste
- are needlessly active
move a lot without reason or purpose
- vital
essential, most important, impossible to do without
- limited resources
here, when there is relatively little food
- to get injured
here, to get hurt or hurt oneself accidentally
- detected by predators
noticed by those who are likely to hunt and kill you