Quick Hits
Daily brief research updates from the cognitive sciences

Sleeping well is essential to brain health
Sleep on i” is common advice for many reasons. Often to consolidate thoughts and help boost creativity. This is a well-known effect. We also know that sleep is the time that helps to detoxify and grow the brain and body, and I have reported on some of these effects in different posts. But this latest research, from the University of Bern, here in Switzerland, supports another hypothesis of sleep — namely that it helps with your emotions.
That sleep, particularly REM sleep (REM sleep is the light sleep phases often associated with dreaming), helps consolidate emotions has been long known. But these researchers found out precisely how this happens in brain cells themselves and this is pretty cool, I have to say.
So, what did they find?
First off, these researchers conditioned mice to two signals. One a fear signal and second, a safety signal. These are the two obvious big emotions in terms of survival and something that is present in all species of animal. They were then able to precisely track these signals in the mice.
What they then found during sleep was astonishing. They found that there was decoupling within neurons to these signals. Specifically, the cell body seemed to be deactivated whereas the dendrites the connecting arms of the neurons activated and processing the emotion. This, the researchers note translates into preferential processing in sleep of safety signals and avoidance of overgeneralising fear emotions which can become generalised anxiety — and they suspect potentially lead to anxiety disorders.
So, the brain needs sleep to process emotions and recorrect emotional signalling but specifically the decoupling of brain cells enables the processing of fear without generalising this. Clever old brain cells.
So, another, another, very good reason to get a good night’s sleep. If you are wondering how much — this latest research here answers that.

Andy Habermacher
Andy is author of leading brains Review, Neuroleadership, and multiple other books. He has been intensively involved in writing and research into neuroleadership and is considered one of Europe’s leading experts. He is also a well-known public speaker speaking on the brain and human behaviour.
Andy is also a masters athlete (middle distance running) and competes regularly at international competitions (and holds a few national records in his age category).
Reference
Mattia Aime, Niccolò Calcini, Micaela Borsa, Tiago Campelo, Thomas Rusterholz, Andrea Sattin, Tommaso Fellin, Antoine Adamantidis.
Paradoxical somatodendritic decoupling supports cortical plasticity during REM sleep.
Science, 2022; 376 (6594): 724
DOI: 10.1126/science.abk2734
More Quick Hits
Behaviour at eight helps predict midlife health behaviours
A long-term study in Finland has tracked children from the age of eight until the age of 50 and a new analysis of the data, just published, has looked at some of the correlations between socioemotional behaviour in childhood and later life achievement and health...
Psychedelics and consciousness
Psychedelics change our conscious experience of the world – that is part of their attraction. Now a new study out of John Hopkins Medicine has analysed data on attributions of consciousness to other animals and innate objects by those using psychedelics and how this...
Lower smartphone usage increases wellbeing
So much has been said about smartphone usage in modern times. This ranges from some who say that they are destroying our brain to others who see they benefit our cognition by outsourcing cognitive heavy tasks like remembering lists of phone numbers – thereby freeing...
Modesty preferred for cooperative teams
In an age where it appears that many people are vying for self-esteem especially through social media, this research is interesting. Particularly in business contexts where cooperation is king. Research has previously shown that appearing to be wealthy increases...
Poverty shrinks babies’ brains
Quick HitsDaily brief research updates from the cognitive sciences couple of studies have just been released which look at the brains of newborns and young babies. The results are worrying for any society. Brain scans of newborn babies from...
Babies born with five from seven functional brain networks
In the 1950s the blank slate theory was the most prominent theory ascribed to babies. They are born blank slates and then their experiences allow them to develop their networks thoughts, associations, etc., and just about everything else. Though this theory is long...