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Power nap

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A woman having a nap in a napping pod, in the café Nappuccino in Barcelona, Catalonia (Spain)

A power nap or cat nap is a short sleep that terminates before deep sleep (slow-wave sleep; SWS). A power nap is intended to quickly revitalize the sleeper.

A power nap combined with consuming caffeine is called a stimulant nap, coffee nap, caffeine nap, or nappuccino.[1]

Characteristics

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A power nap, also known as a Stage 2 nap, is a short slumber of 20 minutes or less which terminates before the occurrence of deep slow-wave sleep, intended to quickly revitalize the napper. The expression "power nap" was coined by Cornell University social psychologist James Maas.[2]

The 20-minute nap increases alertness and motor skills.[2] Various durations may be recommended for power naps, which are short compared to regular sleep. The short duration prevents nappers from sleeping so long that they enter the slow wave portion of the normal sleep cycle without being able to complete the cycle. Entering deep, slow-wave sleep and failing to complete the normal sleep cycle, can result in a phenomenon known as sleep inertia, where one feels groggy, disoriented, and even sleepier than before beginning the nap. In order to attain optimal post-nap performance, a Stage 2 nap must be limited to the beginning of a sleep cycle, specifically sleep stages N1 and N2, typically 18–25 minutes.

Experimental confirmation of the benefits of this brief nap comes from a Flinders University study in Australia in which 5, 10, 20, or 30-minute periods of sleep were given. The greatest immediate improvement in measures of alertness and cognitive performance came after the 10 minutes of sleep. The 20 and 30-minute periods of sleep showed evidence of sleep inertia immediately after the naps and improvements in alertness more than 30 minutes later, but not to a greater level than after the 10 minutes of sleep.[3] Power naps are effective even when schedules allow a full night's sleep.[4]

Research

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Potential benefits

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Power naps intend to restore alertness, performance, and learning ability.[5][6] A nap may also reverse the hormonal impact of a night of poor sleep or reverse the damage of sleep deprivation.[7] A University of Düsseldorf study found superior memory recall once a person had reached 6 minutes of sleep, suggesting that the onset of sleep may initiate active memory processes of consolidation which—once triggered—remains effective even if sleep is terminated.[6]

According to clinical studies among men and women, power nappers of any frequency or duration had a significantly lower mortality ratio due to heart disease than those not napping. Specifically, those occasionally napping had a 12% lower coronary mortality, whereas those systematically napping had a 37% lower coronary mortality.[8]

A Flinders University study of individuals restricted to only five hours of sleep per night found a 10-minute nap was overall the most recuperative nap duration of various nap lengths they examined (lengths of 0 min, 5 min, 10 min, 20 min, and 30 minutes): the 5-minute nap produced few benefits in comparison with the no-nap control; the 10-minute nap produced immediate improvements in all outcome measures (including sleep onset latency, subjective sleepiness, fatigue, vigor, and cognitive performance), with some of these benefits maintained for as long as 155 minutes; the 20-minute nap was associated with improvements emerging 35 minutes after napping and lasting up to 125 minutes after napping; and the 30-minute nap produced a period of impaired alertness and performance immediately after napping, indicative of sleep inertia, followed by improvements lasting up to 155 minutes after the nap.[9]

The NASA Ames Fatigue Countermeasures Group studied the effects of sleep loss and jet lag, and conducts training to counter these effects. A major fatigue countermeasures recommendation consists of a 40-minute nap ("NASA nap") which empirically showed to improve flight crew performance and alertness with a 22% statistical risk of entering SWS.[10]

For several years, scientists have been investigating the benefits of napping, both the power nap and much longer sleep durations as long as 1–2 hours. Performance across a wide range of cognitive processes has been tested.[10] Studies demonstrate that naps are as good as a night of sleep for some types of memory tasks.

A NASA study led by David F. Dinges, professor at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, found that naps can improve certain memory functions.[11] In that NASA study, volunteers spent several days living on one of 18 different sleep schedules, all in a laboratory setting. To measure the effectiveness of the naps, tests probing memory, alertness, response time, and other cognitive skills were used.

Power Napping Enablers and sleep timers allow properly timed power napping.

One study showed that a midday snooze reverses information overload. Reporting in Nature Neuroscience, Sara Mednick, PhD, Stickgold and colleagues also demonstrated that "burnout" irritation, frustration and poorer performance on a mental task can set in as a day of training wears on. This study also proved that, in some cases, napping could even boost performance to an individual's top levels. The NIMH team wrote: "The bottom line is: we should stop feeling guilty about taking that 'power nap' at work."[12]

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention studied the effects of socioeconomic status on short sleep durations. In this 2007-2008 CDCP study, 4,850 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) produced self-reported sleep durations. It was suggested through this study that individuals with minority status and a lower ranking in socioeconomic position are more inclined to have shorter self-reported sleep durations.[13]

Potential risks and detriments

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Longer and more frequent daytime naps appeared to be associated with a higher risk of Alzheimer's dementia in a study that tracked 1401 older people over 14 years.[14][15] Links have also been proposed between these types of naps and cardiovascular disease, though the evidence is largely inconclusive. A series of studies by the medical journal Sleep demonstrated that people who nap for an hour or more a day had 1.82 times the rate of cardiovascular disease than people who didn't nap.[16][17]

Stimulant nap

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A coffee nap is drinking a cup of coffee before a short 15-minute nap.

A stimulant nap is a brief period of sleep of around 15 minutes, preceded by consuming a caffeinated drink or another stimulant.

It may combat daytime drowsiness more effectively than napping or drinking coffee alone.[1][18][19] A stimulant nap is more effective than regular naps in improving post-nap alertness and cognitive functioning.[20][21] In a driving simulator and a series of studies, Horne and Reyner investigated the effects of cold air, radio, a break with no nap, a nap, caffeine pill vs. placebo and a short nap preceded by caffeine on mildly sleep-deprived subjects. A nap with caffeine was by far the most effective in reducing driving accidents and subjective sleepiness as it helps the body get rid of the sleep-inducing chemical compound adenosine.[22][unreliable source?] Caffeine in coffee takes up to half an hour to have an alerting effect, hence "a short (<15min) nap will not be compromised if it is taken immediately after the coffee."[23][24][25] One account suggested that it was like a "double shot of energy" from the stimulating boost from caffeine plus better alertness from napping.[1] This procedure has been studied on sleep-deprived humans given the task of driving a motor vehicle afterwards,[26] although it has not been studied on elderly populations.[27]

Nap rooms and tech aided naps

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EnergyPod, a sleeping pod, located in a small nap room of the Olin library at Wesleyan University[28]

Some companies have nap rooms to allow employees to take power naps. This may be in a form of a nap room with a recliner, or chairs specially designed for power napping installed in a designated area. Companies with nap rooms say that employees are happier and become more productive at work.[29]

Similar nap rooms and stations also exist in higher education institutions. Many colleges and universities provide napping furnitures such as cots and giant bean bags in libraries for students to take naps after long periods of study. At least one university[which?] has a nap room set up in a gym. Some medical schools also set up nap rooms at teaching hospitals. The nap rooms may include sleeping pods or cots, white noise machines, and antimicrobial pillows.[30]

In Barcelona, there is a café called Nappuccino[31][32] that implements custom-built napping pods inside the café.

A more portable aid is a nap timer app. Apps have various features including aided sounds, nap history and pattern tracking and daily reminders that make it easier to take naps.

See also

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  • Nap – Short period of sleep during typical waking hours
  • Siesta – Short nap taken in the early afternoon
  • Sleeping while on duty – Falling asleep while working

References

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  1. ^ a b c Naomi Imatome Yun, World Lifestyle, Get a Jolt with the “Caffeine Nap”, Retrieved Aug. 29, 2014, "Napuccino... Longborough University scientists have found out that having caffeine before a short nap boosts alertness...
  2. ^ a b Mednick, Sara C.; Mark Ehrman (2006). Take a Nap! Change Your Life (First ed.). New York, NY, USA: Workman Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7611-4290-4.
  3. ^ Brooks, A; Lack, L. (2006). "A brief afternoon nap following nocturnal sleep restriction: which nap duration is most recuperative?". Sleep. 29 (6): 831–840. doi:10.1093/sleep/29.6.831. PMID 16796222. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  4. ^ Hayashi, Mitsuo; Hori, Tadao (1 April 1998). "The effects of a 20-min nap before post-lunch dip". Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences. 52 (2): 203–204. doi:10.1111/j.1440-1819.1998.tb01031.x. PMID 9628152. S2CID 14147227.
  5. ^ Dhand, Rajiv; Sohal, Harjyot (2007). "Good sleep, bad sleep! The role of daytime naps in healthy adults". Current Opinion in Internal Medicine. 6 (6): 91–94. doi:10.1097/01.mcp.0000245703.92311.d0. PMID 17053484. S2CID 30067543.
  6. ^ a b Lahl, Olaf; Wispel, Christiane; Willigens, Bernadette; Pietrowsky, Reinhard (2008). "An ultra short episode of sleep is sufficient to promote declarative memory performance". Journal of Sleep Research. 17 (1): 3–10. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2869.2008.00622.x. PMID 18275549. S2CID 12623878.
  7. ^ "Napping may be able to reverse the damage of sleep deprivation". sciencealert. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
  8. ^ Naska, Androniki (2007-02-12). "Siesta in Healthy Adults and Coronary Mortality in the General Population". Archives of Internal Medicine. 167 (3): 296–301. doi:10.1001/archinte.167.3.296. ISSN 0003-9926. PMID 17296887.
  9. ^ Brooks, A; Lack, L (2006). "A brief afternoon nap following nocturnal sleep restriction: Which nap duration is most recuperative?". Sleep. 29 (6): 831–40. doi:10.1093/sleep/29.6.831. PMID 16796222.
  10. ^ a b "NASA: Alertness Management: Strategic Naps in Operational Settings". 1995. Archived from the original on 2012-04-19. Retrieved 2012-04-16.
  11. ^ Mollicone, Daniel J.; Van Dongen, Hans P.A.; Dinges, David F. (2007). "Optimizing sleep/wake schedules in space: Sleep during chronic nocturnal sleep restriction with and without diurnal naps". Acta Astronautica. 60 (4–7): 354. Bibcode:2007AcAau..60..354M. doi:10.1016/j.actaastro.2006.09.022.
  12. ^ "The National Institute of Mental Health Power Nap Study". 2002-07-01. Archived from the original on 2002-08-02. Retrieved 2002-07-01.
  13. ^ Grandner, Michael A.; Patel, Nirav P.; Gehrman, Philip R.; Xie, Dawei; Sha, Daohang; Weaver, Terri; Gooneratne, Nalaka (2010-05-01). "Who gets the best sleep? Ethnic and socioeconomic factors related to sleep complaints". Sleep Medicine. 11 (5): 470–478. doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2009.10.006. ISSN 1389-9457. PMC 2861987.
  14. ^ "Long naps may be early sign of Alzheimer's disease, study shows". The Guardian. 17 March 2022. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
  15. ^ Li, Peng; Gao, Lei; Yu, Lei; Zheng, Xi; Ulsa, Ma Cherrysse; Yang, Hui-Wen; Gaba, Arlen; Yaffe, Kristine; Bennett, David A.; Buchman, Aron S.; Hu, Kun; Leng, Yue (17 March 2022). "Daytime napping and Alzheimer's dementia: A potential bidirectional relationship". Alzheimer's & Dementia. 19 (1): 158–168. doi:10.1002/alz.12636. ISSN 1552-5260. PMC 9481741. PMID 35297533.
  16. ^ Precker, Michael (July 22, 2020). "Enjoy your nap, but be aware of the pros and cons". American Heart Association.
  17. ^ Yamada, Tomohide; Hara, Kazuo; Shojima, Nobuhiro; Yamauchi, Toshimasa; Kadowaki, Takashi (December 1, 2015). "Daytime Napping and the Risk of Cardiovascular Disease and All-Cause Mortality: A Prospective Study and Dose-Response Meta-Analysis". Sleep. 38 (12): 1945–1953. doi:10.5665/sleep.5246. PMC 4667384. PMID 26158892.
  18. ^ The Editors of Prevention, Prevention magazine, 6 Good Health Habits Made Better, Retrieved Aug. 29, 2014, "...1. Take a "caffeine nap"..."
  19. ^ An Unashamed Defense of Coffee, Authors: Roseane M. Santos, Roseane M. Santos, M.Sc., Ph.D. & Darcy R. Lima, M.D., Ph.D., Darcy R. Lima, Xlibris Corporation publishers, 2009, [1], Retrieved Aug. 29, 2014, (see page 66), "...researchers found worked best was a Caffeine Nap..."
  20. ^ ANAHAD O'CONNOR OCTOBER 31, 2011, The New York Times, Really? The Claim: For a More Restful Nap, Avoid Caffeine, Retrieved Aug. 29, 2014, "...sleep researchers in England found that drinking a cup of coffee and then immediately taking a 15-minute nap was even more effective....
  21. ^ Rose Eveleth, Smithsonian magazine, OCTOBER 24, 2013, What Is the Exactly Perfect Time to Drink Your Coffee? It's a good thing that science is here to figure out the exact perfect way to drink a cup of coffee, Retrieved Aug. 29, 2014, "...taking a 15 minute (no longer) nap right after you chug your coffee..."
  22. ^ Corrie Pikul, 02/27/2012, Oprah magazine, 6 More Health Myths—Busted!, Retrieved Aug. 29, 2014, "...Drinking a cup of coffee and then immediately snoozing for 15 minutes was more effective at reviving a wiped-out person.."
  23. ^ Reyner, LA; Horne, JA (1998). "Evaluation 'in-car' countermeasures to sleepiness: Cold air and radio". Sleep. 21 (1): 46–50. PMID 9485532.
  24. ^ Horne, J. A.; Reyner, L. A. (1995). "Driver sleepiness". Journal of Sleep Research. 4 (S2): 23–29. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2869.1995.tb00222.x. PMID 10607207. S2CID 45193968.
  25. ^ "Loughborough University researchers issue new warning to tired drivers". Retrieved 2007-09-23.
  26. ^ Reyner, L. A; Horne, J. A (1997). "Suppression of sleepiness in drivers: Combination of caffeine with a short nap". Psychophysiology. 34 (6): 721–5. doi:10.1111/j.1469-8986.1997.tb02148.x. PMID 9401427.
  27. ^ Wan, J; Lau, E; Lee, T (2013). "The effect of caffeine nap on declarative and procedural memory in elderly". Sleep Medicine. 14: e309. doi:10.1016/j.sleep.2013.11.758.
  28. ^ Schwartz, Meredith (24 October 2012). "Napping in the Library—On Purpose". Library Journal. Retrieved 24 February 2015.
  29. ^ Stump, Scott (15 March 2013). "'Nap rooms' encourage sleeping on the job to boost productivity". TODAY Money. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  30. ^ Waxman, Olivia B. (29 August 2014). "Napping Around: Colleges Provide Campus Snooze Rooms". TIME. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  31. ^ Romero, Shantal (18 June 2019) "Nappuccino: Conoce el primer café en el mundo en donde puedes dormir". RSVP
  32. ^ (16 March 2019)"Télématin France 2 TV". FRANCE 2 TV 2h27min

Further reading

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  • Maas, James. Power Sleep : The Revolutionary Program That Prepares Your Mind for Peak Performance; William Morrow Paperbacks; 1st edition, 19 December 1998; ISBN 978-0060977603.
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