Sleepiness is next to selfishness

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Image by Mert Kahveci on Unsplash
Image by Mert Kahveci on Unsplash

People are less willing to help others after a bad night’s sleep, according to new research published in PLOS Biology. US researchers gave volunteers an ‘altruism questionnaire’ after a normal night’s sleep and after a night of sleep deprivation, with 79% reporting that they felt less likely to help others when they had lost sleep. Functional MRI scans revealed that this was associated with reduced activity in parts of the brain associated with understanding and empathising with others. The researchers also found charitable donations in the US dropped by 10% in the weeks following daylight savings, as the whole population lost an hour of sleep.

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From: PLOS

Getting less sleep makes people less likely to help others

The decision to help people depends on sleep at individual, group, and even societal levels

Whether it’s a night of sleep deprivation, natural sleep variation, or just a single hour of sleep lost for a whole society, research by Eti Ben Simon, Matthew Walker, and colleagues at the University of California, Berkeley, USA shows people withdraw their decision to help others in need after sleep loss. The study, publishing August 23rd in the open-access journal PLOS Biology, shows that this behavior is associated with reduced activity in the prosocial cognitive network of the brain.

Our willingness to help others is fundamental to human society. Replicated across three different experiments, the researchers examined how sleep loss affects this essential human behavior. First, individual willingness to help others and brain activity were assessed through a self-reported altruism questionnaire after a night of normal sleep and after a night of sleep deprivation, and these individuals had their brain activity assessed using fMRI imaging. Second, a group of people was given the altruism questionnaire after keeping sleep diaries evaluating sleep quality and quantity. Third, donations in the United States were determined in the weeks before and after losing an hour of sleep due to Daylight Saving Time.

The fMRI showed that sleep deprivation dampened activity in the social cognition brain network known to be more active during pro-social behaviors. Overall, this impairment in prosocial brain activity was associated with less self-reported desire to help others in the first two experiments. It was also associated with less actual monetary help in the third experiment, which found a 10% drop in donation amounts after the loss of an hour of sleep.

As many societies report reductions in sleep, understanding how this influences our willingness to help others is becoming more important. The study indicates that altruistic acts, such as drives to help victims of natural disasters or war, can be hampered by even minor reductions in a society’s sleep. On the flip side, asking people for help or timing donation drives to periods of adequate sleep could make them more effective.

Walker adds, “Helping is a core, fundamental feature of humankind. This new research demonstrates that a lack of sleep degrades the very fabric of human society itself. How we operate as a social species — and we are a social species — seems profoundly dependent on how much sleep we are getting.”

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Funder: This work was supported by University of California, Berkeley funds awarded to MPW
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