翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Segmentation (biology)
・ Segmentation and Reassembly
・ Segmentation contractions
・ Segmentation fault
・ Segmentation gene
・ Segmentation in the human nervous system
・ Segmentation Rules eXchange
・ Segmentation-based object categorization
・ Segmented arch
・ Segmented filamentous bacteria
・ Segmented file transfer
・ Segmented Hyper Graphics
・ Segmented mirror
・ Segmented regression
・ Segmented scan
Segmented sleep
・ Segmented spindle
・ Segmented turning
・ Segmentina
・ Segmentina nitida
・ Segmenting and positioning
・ Segmentorbis
・ Segmentorbis kanisaensis
・ Segments (album)
・ Segmon
・ Segna di Bonaventura
・ Segnano
・ Segner
・ Segner (crater)
・ Segner wheel


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Segmented sleep : ウィキペディア英語版
Segmented sleep

Segmented sleep, also known as divided sleep, bimodal sleep pattern, bifurcated sleep, or interrupted sleep, is a polyphasic sleep or biphasic sleep pattern where two or more periods of sleep are punctuated by periods of wakefulness. Along with a nap (siesta) in the day, it has been argued that this is the natural pattern of human sleep. A case has been made that maintaining such a sleep pattern may be important in regulating stress.〔
Historian A. Roger Ekirch〔 has argued that before the Industrial Revolution, segmented sleep was the dominant form of human slumber in Western civilization. He draws evidence from documents from the ancient, medieval, and modern world.〔 Other historians, such as Craig Koslofsky, have endorsed Ekirch's analysis.
==As a historical norm==
According to Ekirch's argument, typically individuals slept in two distinct phases, bridged by an intervening period of wakefulness of approximately one hour.〔A. Roger Ekirch (2006), ''At Day's Close: Night In Times Past'', New York: Norton, pp. 308–310 ISBN 0-393-05089-0〕 People also used this time to pray and reflect,〔Frances Quarles (London 1644), ''Enchirdion'' ch. 54〕 and to interpret dreams, which were more vivid at that hour than upon waking in the morning. This was also a favorite time for scholars and poets to write uninterrupted, whereas still others visited neighbors, engaged in sex, or committed petty crime.
The human circadian rhythm regulates the human sleep-wake cycle of wakefulness during the day and sleep at night. Ekirch suggests that it is due to the modern use of electric lighting that most modern humans do not practice segmented sleep, which is a concern for some scientists. Superimposed on this basic rhythm is a secondary one of light sleep in the early afternoon and quiet wakefulness in the early morning.
The brain exhibits high levels of the pituitary hormone prolactin during the period of nighttime wakefulness, which may contribute to the feeling of peace that many people associate with it. It is in many ways similar to the hypnagogic and hypnopompic states which occur just before falling asleep and upon waking, respectively.
The modern popular assumption, that consolidated sleep with no awakenings is the normal and correct way for human adults to sleep, may lead people to consult their doctors fearing they have maintenance insomnia or other sleep disorders.〔 If Ekirch's hypothesis is correct, their concerns might best be addressed by reassurance that their sleep conforms to historically natural sleep patterns.
The two periods of night sleep in Ekirch's theory were called "first sleep" (occasionally "dead sleep") and "second sleep" (or "morning sleep") in medieval England. Ekirch finds that first and second sleep were also the terms in the Romance languages, as well as the Tiv of Nigeria: In French, the common term was ''premier sommeil'' or ''premier somme''; in Italian, ''primo sonno''; in Latin, ''primo somno'' or ''concubia nocte''.〔 He found no common word in English for the period of wakefulness between, apart from paraphrases such as ''first waking'' or ''when one wakes from his first sleep'' and the generic ''watch'' (in its old meaning of being awake). In old French an equivalent generic term is ''dorveille'' (a portmanteau of the French words ''dormir'' (“to sleep”) and ''veiller'' ("to be awake")).
Ekirch suggests that, because members of modern industrialised societies, with late hours facilitated by electric lighting, mostly do not practice segmented sleep, they may misinterpret and mistranslate references to it in literature: common interpretations of the term "first sleep" are "beauty sleep" and "early slumber". A reference to first sleep in the ''Odyssey'' was translated as such in the seventeenth century, but, if Ekirch's hypothesis is correct, was universally mistranslated in the twentieth.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Segmented sleep」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.