I’m so tired. However, the reasons are good:
- A fun weekend away
- A growing business
- Lots of time with family and friends
Still, sometimes sleep suffers. I’m well-aware of what the research says that can entail—health risks and effects on productivity and memory. The idea is that sleep is when the brain has a chance to “clean” itself at night.
A recent study in Nature Neuroscience takes a more precise look at something many people have experienced: those brief, frustrating moments after a bad night’s sleep when you simply can’t focus.
Instead of looking at sleep deprivation over years or even days, the researchers focused on what’s happening inside the brain at the moment attention slips.
The scope of the study
Researchers at MIT and Boston University recruited 26 healthy adults between the ages of 19 and 40.
Each participant went through the same testing protocol twice: once after a full night of sleep and once after staying awake all night under supervision.
During both sessions, the researchers tracked what was happening in real time using several methods at once:
- Functional MRI to monitor blood flow and fluid movement in the brain
- EEG to measure brain activity
- Eye tracking to measure pupil size
- Heart rate and breathing sensors
- Reaction-time attention tests
Because the same people were tested in both conditions, the researchers could compare each person’s performance and physiology when rested versus sleep deprived.
What they found
It’s well-known that sleep deprivation makes it harder to concentrate. The question behind this study was narrower: What exactly is happening inside the brain when attention slips?
The team suspected that the answer might involve processes that normally take place during sleep.
When participants were sleep-deprived, their reaction times slowed and they missed more cues during attention tests. The most striking discovery involved what was happening at the exact moments when those mistakes occurred.
Normally, during sleep, waves of cerebrospinal fluid move through the brain, helping clear away waste products that build up during the day. In this study, after a night without sleep, similar fluid surges began appearing while participants were still awake, and these events tended to line up with brief attention failures.
At the same time, a coordinated set of changes unfolded across the body:
- Pupils constricted
- Breathing slowed
- Heart rate dropped
- Brain-wave patterns shifted
A few seconds later, as attention returned, those signals reversed.
“It’s this kind of very sleeplike moment,” study co-author Laura Lewis told the Wall Street Journal. “The person is awake, but at the same time, there’s clearly this brief breakdown of ability to focus on the outside world.”
A brain trying to do two jobs at once
The study suggested that the brain is juggling competing priorities.
During sleep, it performs what amounts to internal housekeeping, including fluid movement linked to clearing metabolic waste. During waking hours, it prioritizes attention and responsiveness. When sleep is cut short, those maintenance processes don’t disappear. Instead, they begin to intrude into waking life in short bursts, and attention drops at the same time.
Researchers observed that these lapses were tied to a coordinated shift across the brain and body that looked remarkably similar to the early stages of falling asleep.
“This suggests that there’s really some very urgent function of sleep the brain is trying to get to that’s worth this cost,” Lewis told the Journal.
The brain appears to be forcing essential maintenance even when we’re trying to stay awake and engaged.
Why this matters
Most busy adults live with at least some degree of sleep deprivation. It’s easy to assume you can power through a rough night and function close to normal the next day.
However, this research suggests the effects may show up in short, subtle interruptions in attention that happen whether you intend them to or not.
After just one sleepless night, participants reacted more slowly and missed more signals, alongside measurable physiological changes suggesting the brain was temporarily shifting its focus inward.
In situations where attention matters—driving, decision making, managing complex tasks, or even just trying to stay present in a conversation—those brief lapses can carry real consequences.
Outside experts see the findings as part of a much larger picture.
“Sleep disturbances precede most neurodegenerative diseases by up to decades,” University of Rochester neuroscientist Maiken Nedergaard told the Journal. “We really start to look at sleep as an opportunity to prevent many of the diseases of aging.”
The practical lesson
The broader takeaway lines up with decades of sleep research. Sleep supports essential processes that can’t simply be postponed.
When the brain doesn’t get enough time to perform those functions overnight, it starts making room for them during the day. When that happens, attention becomes less stable.
For people balancing work, family, and everything else, the implication is straightforward.
Lost sleep doesn’t just leave you feeling tired. It changes how the brain operates moment to moment, sometimes in ways you don’t fully notice until focus slips at exactly the wrong time.
Enjoy your life, build your business, spend time with your family and friends.
However, don’t sleep on sleep. It’s part of what makes everything else possible.
—Bill Murphy Jr.
This article originally appeared on Fast Company’s sister website, Inc.com.
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