🧠 Neuroscience · Physiology
📅 March 2026⏱ 11 min🟢 Beginner-friendly

Sleep Science: Stages, Circadian Rhythm, and Why We Sleep

Humans spend roughly one-third of their lives unconscious — and we still don't fully understand why. What is clear is that the consequences of disrupted sleep extend from impaired cognition to suppressed immune function to accelerated neurodegenerative disease. Sleep is not a passive pause in life but one of the most complex and active biological processes known.

1. Sleep Stages and Architecture

An EEG (electroencephalogram) measures brain electrical activity and reveals that sleep is not a uniform state but cycles through distinct stages roughly every 90 minutes:

Sleep stages (AASM 2007 classification): Wake: High-frequency (~10-30 Hz beta waves), low-amplitude, desynchronised NREM Stage 1 (N1): ~5% of sleep. Transition to sleep. Theta waves (4-8 Hz). Hypnic jerks may occur (sudden muscle contractions). NREM Stage 2 (N2): ~45-55% of sleep. Sleep spindles (12-15 Hz bursts, 0.5-3 s) generated by thalamocortical loops. K-complexes (large single waves). Consolidation of procedural memory. Temperature and heart rate drop. NREM Stage 3 (N3, "slow-wave sleep" / SWS): ~15-20% of sleep. Slow oscillations (0.5-1 Hz), delta waves (0.5-4 Hz). Highest arousal threshold — hardest to wake from. Proportional to prior wake time (homeostatic marker). Functions: memory consolidation, glymphatic clearance, GH release. Predominates early in the night. REM (Rapid Eye Movement): ~20-25% of sleep. Nearly-awake EEG, muscle atonia. Characteristic: rapid conjugate eye movements, vivid dreaming. Hippocampal theta oscillations (4-8 Hz). Proportional to prior REM deprivation (REM rebound). Functions: emotional memory processing, creative insight, motor learning. Predominates late in the night / morning hours. A typical 8h night: ~4-5 complete cycles. First half: N3 dominant; second half: REM dominant.

2. Circadian Rhythm and the SCN

The suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) — a paired structure of ~20,000 neurons in the hypothalamus — acts as the master circadian clock, with a free-running period of ~24.2 hours that must be entrained daily:

3. Sleep Pressure: Adenosine and Process S

Adenosine accumulation model: During wakefulness: neural activity → ATP hydrolysis → ADP → AMP → Adenosine Adenosine accumulates in the extracellular space, especially in the basal forebrain. Adenosine acts on A1 and A2A receptors → inhibits wake-promoting neurons → promotes sleep (somnogenic effect) Adenosine clears during sleep (via adenosine kinase and deaminase) → "sleep debt" is biochemically real and measurable 40 hours without sleep → adenosine reaches levels causing severe impairment. Cognitive performance after 21 days of 6h sleep/night = 2 nights total sleep deprivation. Caffeine mechanism: Caffeine = adenosine receptor ANTAGONIST (A1, A2A) Does NOT reduce adenosine accumulation — just blocks its effect. After caffeine clears (t½ ≈ 5-6 h, varies by genome CYP1A2): Adenosine receptor block wears off → accumulated adenosine floods receptors → "caffeine crash" Important: caffeine does not prevent N3 slow-wave sleep loss — it only masks the subjective feeling of sleepiness. Neurological impairment continues even if you feel alert on caffeine with sleep deprivation.

4. The Two-Process Model

The Borbély-Achermann two-process model (1982) elegantly explains the timing of sleep and wakefulness through two independent processes:

Process S (homeostatic sleep pressure): S rises during waking (adenosine accumulation, SWA spectral power builds). S falls during sleep (especially N3). Modelled as exponential rise during wake, exponential decay during sleep. S determines the "depth" and drive for sleep — how much SWS occurs. Process C (circadian rhythm): Sinusoidal oscillation with period ~24 h, controlled by SCN. C determines propensity for wakefulness/sleepiness at particular times of day. Two "wake maintenance zones": Morning wake zone: ~08:00–10:00 (weak) Afternoon wake zone: ~18:00–20:00 (strongest — "forbidden zone for sleep") Post-lunch dip / siesta zone: ~14:00–16:00 (circadian trough) Sleep onset occurs when S crosses a threshold defined by C. Wake occurs when S has declined sufficiently AND C provides wake signal. Predictions confirmed: - Afternoon dip in alertness (circadian trough, not just post-lunch) - "Second wind" in evening despite accumulated S - Naps reduce subsequent SWS (reduce S), leave late-sleep REM largely intact - Shift work pathology: circadian misalignment forces sleep against wake signal

5. Why We Sleep: Functions of Sleep

6. Sleep Disorders

7. Chronotypes and Social Jetlag

Chronotype is the individual expression of circadian phase — the natural timing preference for sleep and wakefulness. It is ~50% heritable (PER3, CLOCK gene variants) and varies systematically with age:

Social jetlag: Roenneberg et al. (2006) — the misalignment between biological clock and social clock (work/school schedules). Most people sleep differently on workdays vs free days. The difference in mid-sleep time between workdays and free days is "social jetlag" — median ~1 hour in adults, up to 3+ hours in teenagers. Each hour of social jetlag is associated with 33% increased odds of obesity, increased risk of type 2 diabetes, depression, and all-cause mortality. School start time reform is the highest-impact, lowest-cost public health intervention with the strongest evidence base that schools consistently ignore.