While we may not often think about why we sleep, most of us
acknowledge at some level that sleep makes us feel better. We feel more
alert, more energetic, happier, and better able to function following a
good night of sleep. However, the fact that sleep makes us feel better
and that going without sleep makes us feel worse only begins to explain
why sleep might be necessary.
One way to think about the
function of sleep is to compare it to another of our life-sustaining
activities: eating. Hunger is a protective mechanism that has evolved to
ensure that we consume the nutrients our bodies require to grow, repair
tissues, and function properly. And although it is relatively easy to
grasp the role that eating serves given that it involves physically
consuming the substances our bodies need eating and sleeping are not as
different as they might seem.
Both eating and sleeping are
regulated by powerful internal drives. Going without food produces the
uncomfortable sensation of hunger, while going without sleep makes us
feel overwhelmingly sleepy. And just as eating relieves hunger and
ensures that we obtain the nutrients we need, sleeping relieves
sleepiness and ensures that we obtain the sleep we need.
Scientists have explored the question of why we sleep from many
different angles. They have examined, for example, what happens when
humans or other animals are deprived of sleep. In other studies, they
have looked at sleep patterns in a variety of organisms to see if
similarities or differences among species might reveal something about
sleep's functions. Yet, despite decades of research and many discoveries
about other aspects of sleep, the question of why we sleep has been
difficult to answer.