Academic Integrity: tutoring, explanations, and feedback — we don’t complete graded work or submit on a student’s behalf.

After staying awake for an extended duration, I usually find myself having to ta

ID: 31089 • Letter: A

Question

After staying awake for an extended duration, I usually find myself having to take extra effort to focus my eyes on an object. Similarly after exerting myself to the extent of near total exhaustion I find it necessary to consciously focus to perform actions that would otherwise require little conscious effort (E.g. Writing a note). There're other similar symptoms almost all of which mandate 'conscious effort'.

What really happens when a body is tired? As a corollary, why does making conscious effort usually beat the initial error?

Explanation / Answer

Its still not clear why we need to sleep (as distinguished from the question of why our body gets fatigued in physical exertion). A popular idea is that the brain needs to 'catch up' and reorganize itself given all the stimulus it has had from the previous day. This 2010 National Geographic article says it all:

I asked William Dement, the retired dean of sleep studies, a co-discoverer of REM sleep, and co-founder of the Stanford Sleep Medicine Center, to tell me what he knew, after 50 years of research, about the reason we sleep.