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Laterality
Asymmetries of Brain, Behaviour, and Cognition
Volume 26, 2021 - Issue 1-2: Laterality in animals
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Original Papers

Adaptation and survival: hypotheses about the neural mechanisms of unihemispheric sleep

Pages 71-93 | Received 11 May 2020, Accepted 19 Sep 2020, Published online: 14 Oct 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Sleep and wakefulness are opposite brain and body conditions that accomplish different but complementary functions. However, these opposing conditions have been combined in some animals by the adoption of a sleep/wake strategy that allows them to survive, while maintaining both an interaction with the environment at the same time as enabling brain and body recovery. They sleep with half of the brain while keeping the other half awake: a state known as unihemispheric sleep (US). Sleep of cetaceans is exclusively in the form of US; therefore, they experience neither bihemispheric sleep (BS) nor REM sleep. US episodes have also been recorded in eared seals and some species of birds. In those animals, US episodes are intermingled with episodes of BS and REM sleep. Studies have reported both a lateralized release of some neurotransmitters and a drop of brain temperature during US. The aims of this article are to formulate hypotheses about the neural mechanisms of unihemispheric sleep(US) based on findings regarding the neural mechanisms of the sleep/wake cycle of mammals. The neural mechanisms of the sleep/wake cycle are largely preserved across species, allowing to hypothesize about those triggering and regulating US.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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