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American Focus > Blog > Tech and Science > Your brain tracks your sleep debt – and now we may know how
Tech and Science

Your brain tracks your sleep debt – and now we may know how

Last updated: June 19, 2025 5:30 pm
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Your brain tracks your sleep debt – and now we may know how
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New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

How does the brain encourage us to make up for sleep loss?

Connect Images/Getty Images

Recent research has shed light on a fascinating discovery regarding how the brain in mice tracks and compensates for sleep debt. This breakthrough could potentially pave the way for improved treatments for sleep disorders and conditions characterized by sleep disturbances, such as Alzheimer’s disease.

Sleep debt, the disparity between the amount of sleep needed and the actual amount obtained, has long been a familiar concept. However, the mechanisms underlying how the brain monitors sleep loss and motivates individuals to recuperate this deficit have remained elusive until now.

Mark Wu and his team at Johns Hopkins University in Maryland conducted a study in mice to map out brain pathways associated with sleep. By using a tracer injected into 11 brain regions responsible for promoting sleep, they identified 22 interconnected regions linked to at least four sleep-inducing areas.

Among these regions, a specific subset of 11 previously unidentified areas caught the researchers’ attention. Through the use of chemogenetics, they administered specialized drugs to activate distinct parts of the mice’s brains, with each group receiving stimulation in a different region.

The thalamic nucleus reuniens emerged as a crucial area in this study. When neurons in this region were stimulated, the mice exhibited a significant increase in non-rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, approximately double the amount observed in non-stimulated mice. Interestingly, there was a delay in the mice falling asleep post-stimulation, during which they engaged in preparatory behaviors akin to getting ready for rest.

According to Wu, this pre-sleep routine in mice mirrors human bedtime rituals like teeth brushing and face washing. This suggests that the neurons in the thalamic nucleus reuniens serve as triggers for inducing sleepiness rather than mere sleep switches.

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Further experiments supported this notion, as deactivating the brain cells in the thalamic nucleus reuniens of sleep-deprived mice resulted in decreased sleepiness and activity levels compared to control mice. Additionally, the deprived mice experienced a 10% reduction in non-REM sleep on average.

Additional findings indicated that these neurons become active during sleep deprivation and diminish once sleep commences.

Overall, these results imply that the identified brain region plays a pivotal role in promoting sleepiness and facilitating restorative sleep following periods of sleep loss. Wu suggests that targeting these neurons in potential therapies could lead to advancements in treating hypersomnia and conditions like Alzheimer’s disease, where sleep disturbances are prevalent.

Despite these promising findings, William Giardino from Stanford University highlights the need for further research to determine if a similar brain circuit exists in humans and its implications for prolonged sleep deprivation. He notes that the current focus on short-term effects may not fully encapsulate the complexities of chronic sleep disturbances experienced by many individuals.

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