British Columbia

B.C. professor's sleep trick gets attention from Oprah, Forbes, Guardian

'I figure they want to talk to me about I guess, the theory I developed and the technique I developed to help people fall asleep,' says SFU cognitive scientist Luc Beaudoin.

Luc Beaudoin doesn't expect riches though from the strategy he devised to help people fall asleep

Celebrities like Oprah are sharing the fall-asleep technique a professor at SFU devised (Getty Images/Image Source)

A B.C.-based researcher has caught Oprah's eye with a technique he came up with to help people fall asleep faster.

Luc Beaudoin's "cognitive shuffle" helps redirect a person's focus away from stressful thoughts that could otherwise keep them awake.

Earlier this month, the method was featured in O Magazine. It's also been mentioned by Forbes and The New York Times.

"I guess word gets around," said Beaudoin, who's also an adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University.

How it works

To do the shuffle, people first imagine a word — that doesn't repeat any letters — as they're lying in bed.

Then they think up lists of words that start with each letter of the root word they chose.

So, for example, if someone picked "bird," they would come up with four lists of words starting with the letters B, I, R and D.

Beaudoin, who tested the method with over 150 students, said people often start to feel tuckered before they're finished with the first letter.

"You shuffle your thoughts to sleep," the professor said.

"It's a bit more engaging than, say, counting backwards and it's also a bit more demanding ... it feels like it's easy, but the brain is quite busy when you're doing that."

SFU professor Luc Beaudoin has received considerable attention worldwide for the technique he devised to help put your mind into sleep mode. (SFU)

Beaudoin also created an app, dubbed mySleepButton, that suggests words for users to help get the ball rolling. (The researcher said coming up with your own is the "do-it-yourself" way.)

"I think people find it interesting that there's a new kid on the block in terms of techniques that people can use in bed as they're trying to fall asleep that doesn't involve medication," Beaudoin said. "It's kind of original and it's fun."

With files from Deborah Goble