Can't sleep in a new place? Your left brain might be why
It's possible frequent travellers might adapt to first night effect over time
Over the course of three experiments on 35 young, healthy volunteers, researchers measured brain activity during two consecutive nights of sleep. They consistently found that part of the left side of the brain remained more active than the right side only on the first night, specifically during deep slow-wave sleep.
- Marathon 24- to 26-hour doctor shifts may be unsafe for patients: experts
- Flashing lights at night may help lessen jet lag
While this may be bad news for business travellers who regularly make brief overnight trips, it may not be as troublesome for people who go away for longer periods of time, Sasaki added by email.
Differences in alertness
When they stimulated the left hemisphere with irregular beeping sounds in the right ear during deep sleep on the first night, that prompted significantly greater likelihood of waking and faster action upon waking, than if sounds were played in the left ear to stimulate the right hemisphere.
On the second night, there wasn't any difference in reactions to tests between the left and right hemispheres, even during deep sleep.
While it's possible that the findings may explain poor sleep among frequent travellers, the study wasn't designed to test whether these "first night effects" continue to happen to people every time they hit the road, said Patrick Finan, a psychiatry and behavioural health researcher at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.
"Any clinical implications would be speculative at the moment," Finan added. "However, the level of specificity provided by these analyses could be an important first step in understanding who might be at risk for sleep disorders like insomnia, which is thought to be driven in many patients by chronic hypervigilance."