Early birds wake up
at the crack of dawn and struggle to stay alert and productive
(especially in the cognitive realm) in the evening. Night owls perform
well in the evening but are worthless if you yank them out of bed too
early in the morning. There are less-well-known differences, too: early
birds experience what scientists call “a faster build-up of homeostatic
sleep pressure” during the day compared to night owls, who, like a
certain battery-powered bunny, just seem to keep going and going,
resisting the pressure to sleep. (That must be why I practically turn
into a pumpkin by 9 p.m.) And when they do sleep, early birds
experience a faster dissipation of that sleep pressure, feeling
restored more quickly than night owls. Now a new study, in the journal Science,
reports some intriguing differences between the brain-activity patterns
of the two types that underlie the behavioral differences.
Scientists led by Christina Schmidt and Philippe Peigneux of the University of Liege in Belgium
had 15 extreme night owls and 16 extreme early birds spend two nights
in a sleep lab. The two groups were separated by about four hours in
their sleep patterns; if early birds were happy waking up at 7, night
owls slept til 11, and early birds were ready to go to sleep at 11
while night owls had no trouble staying up til 3 in the morning. An
hour and a half after waking up, and again 10.5 hours after waking up,
the volunteers had their brain activity measured by fMRI while they took a simple reaction-time test of their ability to maintain focused attention. Both the early birds and the night owls were sleeping
and waking whenever they pleased, rather than being kept on an
artificial schedule.
There was no real
difference between the early birds and the night owls in their
performance on the morning test. But the evening test was a different
story: night owls were less sleepy and had faster reaction times than
early birds. (Just to emphasize, 'evening' was a relative term: it was
a different actual time for each group, but the exact same
10.5-hours-after-waking for both early birds and night owls.) So even
though both groups were sleeping and waking according to their
preferred schedule, night owls generally outlasted early birds in how
long they could stay awake and mentally alert before becoming mentally
fatigued. The fMRI supported the behavioral results: 10.5 hours after
waking up, the early birds had lower activity in brain regions linked
to attention and the circadian master clock, compared to night owls.
So don’t ask
your early bird to do anything that requires sustained focus more than
10 or so hours after she gets up. And if you’re an early bird, you can
stop feeling morally superior: night owls can keep their brains awake
and alert for longer after they wake up—even if it’s after noon—than
you can.