Pillow Talk

There is no truth in the old wives' tale that sleep before midnight is more beneficial than sleep after midnight: what counts…

There is no truth in the old wives' tale that sleep before midnight is more beneficial than sleep after midnight: what counts is getting enough sleep at the same time every night.

That "jump", or sensation of falling, which sometimes wakes you with a jolt is really a hypnagogic hallucination as your skeletal muscles relax on the way to slow-wave sleep.

REM sleep isn't just about dreaming: genital arousal during this stage of sleep is quite normal for both sexes and occurs in about 95 per cent of REM cycles.

There really is such a thing as a biological clock: two tiny neural structures, the suprachiasmatic nuclei, in the centre of the brain, control rhythms of alertness, body temperature and hormone production.

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The official record for going without sleep was set by one Randy Gardner in 1965. He stayed awake for 264 hours and 12 minutes - then slept for 14 hours, 40 minutes.

Yawning (the word is derived from the old English ganien, meaning to gape or open wide) is a definite sign of sleepiness. It's also contagious. What it isn't, is a response to an excess of carbon dioxide or a shortage of oxygen.

Up to 90 per cent of people grind their teeth during sleep: five per cent do so chronically, a condition known as `bruxism".

Everyone has an "alertness trough" between 2 and 4 p.m every day.