Study using fMRI and assessments of sleep-deprived show decreased desire to help others
University of California - Berkeley
Lack
of sleep is known to be associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular
disease, depression, diabetes, hypertension and overall mortality. However,
these new discoveries show that a lack of sleep also impairs our basic social
conscience, making us withdraw our desire and willingness to help other people.
In
one portion of the new study, the scientists showed that charitable giving in
the week after the beginning of Daylight Saving Time, when residents of most
states "spring forward" and lose one hour of their day, dropped by
10% -- a decrease not seen in states that do not change their clocks or when
states return to standard time in the fall.
The study, led by UC Berkeley research scientist Eti Ben Simon and Matthew Walker, a UC Berkeley professor of psychology, adds to a growing body of evidence demonstrating that inadequate sleep not only harms the mental and physical well-being of an individual, but also compromises the bonds between individuals -- and even the altruistic sentiment of an entire nation.
"Over
the past 20 years, we have discovered a very intimate link between our sleep
health and our mental health. Indeed, we've not been able to discover a single
major psychiatric condition in which sleep is normal," Walker said.
"But this new work demonstrates that a lack of sleep not only damages the
health of an individual, but degrades social interactions between individuals
and, furthermore, degrades the very fabric of human society itself. How we
operate as a social species -- and we are a social species -- seems profoundly
dependent on how much sleep we are getting."
"We're
starting to see more and more studies, including this one, where the effects of
sleep loss don't just stop at the individual, but propagate to those around
us," said Ben Simon. "If you're not getting enough sleep, it doesn't
just hurt your own well-being, it hurts the well-being of your entire social
circle, including strangers."
Ben
Simon, Walker and colleagues Raphael Vallat and Aubrey Rossi will publish their
results August 23 in the open access journal PLOS Biology. Walker
is the director of the Center for Human Sleep Science. He and Ben Simon are
members of the Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute at UC Berkeley.
Sleeplessness
dampens theory of mind network
The
new report describes three separate studies that assessed the impact of sleep
loss on people's willingness to help others. In the first study, the scientists
placed 24 healthy volunteers in a functional magnetic resonance imager (fMRI)
to scan their brains after eight hours of sleep and after a night of no sleep.
They found that areas of the brain that form the theory of mind network, which
is engaged when people empathize with others or try to understand other
people's wants and needs, were less active after a sleepless night.
"When
we think about other people, this network engages and allows us to comprehend
what other person's needs are: What are they thinking about? Are they in pain?
Do they need help?" Ben Simon said. "However, this network was
markedly impaired when individuals were sleep deprived. It's as though these
parts of the brain fail to respond when we are trying to interact with other
people after not getting enough sleep."
In
a second study, they tracked more than 100 people online over three or four
nights. During this time, the researchers measured the quality of their sleep
-- how long they slept, how many times they woke up -- and then assessed their
desire to help others, such as holding an elevator door open for someone else,
volunteering or helping an injured stranger on the street.
"Here,
we found that a decrease in the quality of someone's sleep from one night to
the next predicted a significant decrease in the desire to help other people
from one subsequent day to the next," Ben Simon said. "Those with poor
sleep the night prior were the ones that reported being less willing and keen
to help others the following day."
The
third part of the study involved mining a database of 3 million charitable
donations in the United States between 2001 and 2016. Did the number of
donations change after the transition to Daylight Saving Time and the potential
loss of an hour of sleep? They found a 10% drop in donations. This same dent in
compassionate gift-giving was not seen in regions of the country that did not
change their clocks.
"Even
a very modest 'dose' of sleep deprivation -- here, just the loss of one single
hour of sleep opportunity linked to daylight saving time -- has a very
measurable and very real impact on people's generosity and, therefore, how we
function as a connected society," Walker said. "When people lose one
hour of sleep, there's a clear hit on our innate human kindness and our
motivation to help other people in need."
An
earlier study by Walker and Ben Simon showed that sleep deprivation forced
people to socially withdraw and become more socially isolated. A lack of sleep
also increased their feelings of loneliness. Worse still, when those
sleep-deprived individuals interacted with other people, they spread their
loneliness to those other individuals, almost like a virus, Walker said.
"Looking
at the big picture, we're starting to see that a lack of sleep results in a
quite asocial and, from a helping perspective, anti-social individual, which
has manifold consequences to how we live together as a social species," he
said. "A lack of sleep makes people less empathetic, less generous, more
socially withdrawn, and it's infectious -- there is contagion of
loneliness."
"The
realization that the quantity and quality of sleep affects an entire society,
caused by an impairment in prosocial behavior, may provide insights into our
societal state of affairs in the present day," Walker added.
This
finding also offers a novel approach to improving these specific aspects of our
society.
"Promoting
sleep, rather than shaming people for sleeping enough, could very palpably help
shape the social bonds we all experience every day," Ben Simon said.
"Sleep,
it turns out, is an incredible lubricant to prosocial, connected, empathic,
kind and generous human behavior. In these divisive times, if there was ever a
need for a strong, prosocial lubricant to enable the very best version of
ourselves within society, now seems to be it," said Walker, author of the
international bestseller, Why We Sleep. "Sleep may be a
wonderful ingredient that enables the alacrity of helping between human
beings."
"Sleep
is essential for all aspects of our physical, mental and emotional lives,"
Ben Simon said. "When sleep is undervalued in society, not only do we get
sleep-deprived doctors, nurses and students, but we also suffer from unkind and
less empathic interactions on a daily basis."
In
developed countries, more than half of all people report getting insufficient
sleep during the work week.
"It is time as a society to abandon the idea that sleep is unnecessary or a waste and, without feeling embarrassed, start getting the sleep that we need," she added. "It is the best form of kindness we can offer ourselves, as well as the people around us."