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Science

'Just Sleep On It' Solves Tricky Problems? 527

An anonymous reader writes "CBC news reports that the effectiveness of 'sleeping on it' when faced with a difficult task may have more than just anecdotal roots. 66 students were trained to perform a calculation on an eight digit number using two simple rules which would take seven steps to complete. A different method existed to perform the same calculation 'almost instantly', but was not shown to the students. After eight hours, where half the students were allowed to sleep and the other half remained awake, 60% of the rested and 22% of the wakeful students discovered the more efficient method."
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'Just Sleep On It' Solves Tricky Problems?

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  • by gowen ( 141411 ) <gwowen@gmail.com> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:36AM (#8053903) Homepage Journal
    If nothing else, it means I've been thinking very hard indeed while at work this morning.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:36AM (#8053909)
    I've just forwarded this to my boss, sleeping on the job is now a good thing.
  • It's True (Score:5, Funny)

    by CuriHP ( 741480 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:37AM (#8053922)
    I know I've solved Calculus projects in my sleep before. The tricky part is trying to remember it when you wake up.
    • by TopShelf ( 92521 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:47AM (#8054018) Homepage Journal
      That's funny, I've had the same issue with the "how to pick up gorgeous women for incredible one-night stands" problem.
    • Re:It's True (Score:5, Interesting)

      by the_mad_poster ( 640772 ) <shattoc@adelphia.com> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:15AM (#8054263) Homepage Journal

      You've been modded funny, but there's more truth in your jest then the mods might've realized.

      I'm sure most people realize it's very difficult to remember most dreams. People who say they "don't dream" are really just dreaming in deep sleeps and not waking up throughout the night. However, if you're startled awake for some reason (whether by the dream or external factors) during or shortly after a dream, your odds of remembering it shoot way up. Hence the advice to keep a notepad by the bed to write things down if you want to recall your dreams. I don't see why this wouldn't extend to dreams that may help solve problems.

      One other thing I remember a professor telling us - If you're faced with a difficult problem of some sort, go do something else for awhile. Your brain will continue working out the solution while you do something else (sort of like './programming_problem &' I suppose with optimization for background processes). I do that at work all the time. I don't know if it would be more effective than sleep, but if I'm faced with a tough programming problem, I'll hit Slashdot or go take a walk. I recall working for hours upon hours once on a tough nested data structure for a custom search system. Finally, in total frustration, I got up and stormed out of the cube, went and sat in my car, and turned on a CD. After 15 or 20 minutes, I got up, came back in, sat down, and Hallelujah! I banged out the data structure and supporting code in about 20 minutes more. A few optimizations and tweaks later, and I was done. No clue where it came from. Wasn't thinking about it consciously in the car, but apparently the ol' brain was still churning and took advantage of the lack of stress from overfocus.

      • Re:It's True (Score:5, Interesting)

        by CrayzyJ ( 222675 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @10:18AM (#8054856) Homepage Journal
        True Story. I was stuck on a bug during my undergraduate work. In the middle of the night, my girlfriend tells me, I jumped out of bed, clicked away on the keyboard and climbed back in bed. The next morning, I found the solution to my problem, albeit ill-typed, on my screen.

        After this occurred, I decided to look into it. Experts suggest purposely thinking of a tough problem *right* before you fall asleep. Your subconsious is a) much smarter than you conscious and b) never stops working. Giving it a job to do will result it working on it all night. Try it. If you remember your dreams, the results are cool.

        This is why mental breaks, as the parent mentioned, work. Let your subconscious do the hard work. It's much better at it than your slow, cloudy, easily distracted, conscious thought. Another example, have you ever forgot something important, and then out of the blue while doing something else you remember? Your SC was working on the job the whole time. Ultra-cool, IMHO.

        • Re:It's True (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Communomancer ( 8024 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @10:45AM (#8055142)
          Your subconcious is not much smarter than your concious. Your concious is not "slow", "cloudy", or any more "easily distracted" than your subconcious is. If you think that your subcon isn't easily distracted, think about when your dreams have gone from somewhat sensical to utterly non-sensical in one bewildering instant.

          The only thing your subconcious has going for it is that it doesn't have to process the terrabytes of data that the outside world hurls at your concious every second. So yeah, you have a few spare cycles you wouldn't otherwise have. But don't mistake it for "superiority".
          • The only thing your subconcious has going for it is that it doesn't have to process the terrabytes of data that the outside world hurls at your concious every second.

            That sounds almost exactly backwards.
            The subconscious processes enormous amounts of data, but in its own time and on its own terms. Occasionally it will dump a bit of stuff into the conscious. The subconscious isn't exactly smarter. It's more that the subconscious can try out all sorts of connections without concern for consequences. As for n
      • Re:It's True (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Pinky ( 738 )
        Yes. I do this all the time. In fact, most tasks can background process independently.. which means if you are working on three (or more) hard problems at once they all tend to background process and if they are related they tend to compliment each other too. Just be careful with this because you will need more sleep. As much as 4 hours more in my experience depending on how how many problems and how long your worke don them etc...

        When I'm programming and I get seriously stuck, I just go for a walk or star
      • if I'm faced with a tough programming problem, I'll hit Slashdot or go take a walk

        Yeah, I was faced with a tough PHP problem so I hit slashdot. That was 6 months ago and I am still hitting F5 on the homepage. Damn you slashdot!
      • Re:It's True (Score:4, Informative)

        by skintigh2 ( 456496 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @01:06PM (#8057034)
        Being startled awake might work, but that doesn't happen very often.

        If you stay in the exact position you were sleeping in, and slowly transition from sleeping to waking, you can often remember details more clearly.

        Or, you can arrange to be startled awake. Supposedly Salvador Dali would hold a spoon in his hand while dozing off, and the spoon would drop and wake him up just after falling asleep (and entering REM) and thus inspired his paintings of melting clocks (and spoons).
    • by thelenm ( 213782 ) <(mthelen) (at) (gmail.com)> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @12:38PM (#8056669) Homepage Journal
      I've thought that I've solved calculus (and other) problems in my sleep before. Once I even forced myself awake so I could write down on paper whatever brilliant thing had come to me in my dream. When I woke up in the morning, the writing was mostly unreadable, but the readable words said something utterly stupid, like "half of pigs rolling will unite the values". Maybe dreaming is sort of like being drunk, in that you perceive yourself as much smarter than you really are.
  • Prediction (Score:3, Funny)

    by Mr Guy ( 547690 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:38AM (#8053925) Journal
    Now sales of those tapes that will help you "improve your life while you sleep" will REALLY take off.
  • internalizing (Score:2, Insightful)

    by ch-chuck ( 9622 )
    I think that's what mgmt consultants call "internalizing" - turning something you know intellectually, that you just learned and have to make an effort to think of, into something intuitive, that just automatically occurs.
  • Well established (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Space cowboy ( 13680 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:39AM (#8053929) Journal
    I thought it was pretty well-established that sleep plays a role in post-analysis of the days accumulatd information ? There have been too-many-to-count articles on the subject in New Scientist / Scientific American ...

    There must be an evolutionary advantage to having a time when nothing else was going on to do something, and what else apart from the days events could occupy a brain if it has no external sensory input... I seriously doubt all the higher life-forms on the planet would do it if there wasn't a good reason....

    Simon
    Simon
    • There must be an evolutionary advantage to having a time when nothing else was going on to do something, and what else apart from the days events could occupy a brain if it has no external sensory input... I seriously doubt all the higher life-forms on the planet would do it if there wasn't a good reason....


      I've read it before, quite a few times I'm sure, and yes in NS and Sciam too. What I suspect is that, perhaps, sleep is the time when parts of our minds can solve problems without the biases we have w
    • I thought it was pretty well-established that sleep plays a role in post-analysis of the days accumulatd information ?

      It is well established. I honestly don't know who forked over the cash for this study, but this must have been an alternative to a dot-com investment. I think I'm going to start a new career. I'll choose subjects with a well-known outcome and devise a study that proves what everybody already knows. That way, I can collect all kinds of grant money. Anybody with me?

      • " Anybody with me?"

        If I can get some grant money, I'll do a study to see if anyone would be with you or not. Our preliminary results say about 70% of the people would be, while 20% wouldnt, and 10% would like to thank you for all of the fish.
    • Yeah, next they'll be telling us that researchers have "discovered" that Men think worse when you put a pretty woman in front of them.... ...wait, wasn't that already a "news" story a few months ago?
    • by jorleif ( 447241 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:54AM (#8054085)
      Not using as much energy when asleep and rebuilding muscle and other tissue are probably also a factors, but perhaps orthogonal ones. It is imaginable that there could exist a lifeform which would rest (and thus save energy, rebuild) without putting its mind in a sleeping state.

      Saving energy cannot possibly be the whole reason, because in that case you could compensate for lack of sleep by eating more, and you can to a point but after 48 hours or so of waking time you usually notice that it's not so much the lack of energy but the lack of ability to concentrate. So intuitively it would seem that the mind needs to do something that demands it to be in "sleep-mode".
      • Re:Well established (Score:5, Interesting)

        by Mwongozi ( 176765 ) <slashthree AT davidglover DOT org> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:20AM (#8054308) Homepage
        Many aquatic animals do not sleep in the same way that we do. Dolphins have the ability to shut off parts of their brain when they're not using them, although for what reason I'm not entirely sure.

        My CPU can do that too...
      • Re:Well established (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Beardydog ( 716221 )
        I'd always heard you burn more energy sleeping than you do when you're awake, but relaxed (watching tv, etc) which isn't all the surprising if the brain is busy rebuilding itself and working on the problems of the day.

        IIRC, going 11 days without sleep tends to kill people, so it's definitely doing things vital to your health.
        • Re:Well established (Score:5, Interesting)

          by Beardydog ( 716221 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:24AM (#8054349)
          Explains dolphins a bit too. Dolphins don't get to sleep in caves and holes like surface mammals, they need to surface to breath, and holding still inthe middle of the ocean too long with your senses shut down makes you extremely edible

          But with the ability to shut down one piece at a time, they can let sections rebuild without having to shut down the whole thing.

          Like keeping a base system on one of my drives, so if one goes down, I can use the other to fix it without having to futz around with disks.
  • The Great Brain (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Speare ( 84249 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:39AM (#8053931) Homepage Journal

    This was a common strategy used by the fictional middle brother in the series of books called "The Great Brain" by JD Fitzgerald. It tracked the deals and schemes of a wily kid in early 1900s Utah, as seen by his awestruck little brother. He'd think on his hardest mental problems just before going to bed, and would usually awake with an inspiration.

    I often employ the same strategy, with mixed results, but it's better than not coming up with any ideas at all.

  • What kind of sleep? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gilesx ( 525831 ) * on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:39AM (#8053933)
    It'd be interesting to see what type of sleep these students had. I regularly take 20 minute naps that leave me refreshed and able to better handle problems. Can I assume that traditional / deep sleep is better than light sleep / napping?

    And what about induced sleep through alcohol or medication? Could it be beneficial to have the ability to "sleep on demand" to solve a tough problem?
    • I'm sure that alcohol is not going to help an awful lot.
    • I've taken several classes on sleep, learning and how the brain works. It's really fascinating. However, the best reason I've heard for why sleep is necessary is to reprogram your brain. (It's not to recover the body at all; the body can function just fine, 24 hours a day, indefinitely.) If you think about it, a computer can run forever without needing to rest, but the brain is a lot different from a computer, it needs to process the activities of the day, needs to create new connections between memorie
    • My late grandfather, my mother tells me, had the ability to lie down and go to sleep instantly, and wake up after a predetermined amount of time, like he had an internal alarm clock. I've heard of other people being able to do this too. I wonder if that is an ability that can be learned or if you're just born with it. Anyone know?
      • by lawpoop ( 604919 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:57AM (#8054673) Homepage Journal
        I don't know about internal timers, but here's a story from my exchange in Ecuador.

        For a Spanish immersion program, I stayed with a host family in Quito. About 20 miles from the equator. There, there is no dawn or dusk. At 6 AM, broad daylight. At 6 PM, night.

        We had to get up early to catch a bus to take us to school. We were supposed to bring an alarm clock, but I didn't. The first day, I thought, "oh well, I'll just wake up tomorrow and see what happens." (There was no jet lag because we were travelling N/S). So, with my east-facing window, the sun woke me up the next morning. I got up, left my room, went in to the kitchen, and checked the clock on the microwave. It said, "6:21".

        I never needed an alarm clock during the whole stay. The sun always woke me up at 6:21 or 6:22.

    • by SamSim ( 630795 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:46AM (#8054586) Homepage Journal

      Some people have tried sleeping 20-minutes naps every four hours, and nothing else. Basically, by doing this, you trick the brain into getting all its REM sleep done right away instead of spending two hours sinking into it and two hours rising out in the morning. It's called Uberman's sleep schedule [everything2.com] and people who've tried it seem to love it.

      I'm hoping to try it myself over Easter.

      • by jandrese ( 485 ) *
        Interestingly, Scientific American had an article on sleep a few months ago that suggested both REM and non-REM sleep were essental to various brain functions. Trying to force yourself into REM-only sleep might not be such a wise idea as you would only be regenerating half of the necessary brain chemestry in the long run.
        • by mce ( 509 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @10:51AM (#8055202) Homepage Journal
          Indeed. Experiments have shown that both types of sleep are needed. During the deep sleep phases, the brain processes the facts of the previous day and classified the things you have learned, thereby making sure they will be remembered. During REM sleep, it makes new mental connections between things it already knows.

          Or to put it very simplistically: the deep sleep phase makes you smarter, the REM phase sleep makes you wiser. Your brain needs both for you to function properly on the longer term.

      • by poot_rootbeer ( 188613 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @11:38AM (#8055860)

        Word of advice to anyone thinking about giving the Uberman sleep schedule a chance: check what actual experts think about it first. I recommend sleep researcher Dr. James Maas's book "Power Sleep".

        Never take lifestyle advice from some guy who wrote an Everything2 article at face value. Do your research. Dr. Maas has.
      • by menscher ( 597856 ) <[menscher+slashdot] [at] [uiuc.edu]> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @12:56PM (#8056922) Homepage Journal
        I tried something similar... I slept for 2 hours every 12. So, 4 hours of each 24-hour period. It was pretty amazing. I was always alert. Never had the problem of being tired at the end of the day. And it works well with a schedule, since you can go to work in the day, take a nap, then work all night, take a nap, and be ready the next day.

        Only one problem. After 2 weeks I realized my body wasn't keeping up with my brain. Even though I could think through things quickly (which is fine if you have a desk job) my body seemed to be physically deteriorating. So I went back to the "normal" sleep schedule.

        Still, I'd recommend this if you ever have a "crunch time", like when an important project is due, or possible for finals week, or something.

  • Einstein (Score:4, Informative)

    by pubjames ( 468013 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:39AM (#8053936)
    I remember reading somewhere that Einstein would sleep for 14 hours or more at a time. And Margret Thatcher could get by on just a couple of hours.
    • Re:Einstein (Score:4, Funny)

      by adrianbaugh ( 696007 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:47AM (#8054025) Homepage Journal
      Bush probably never sleeps at all ;-)
    • That's further proof, then.
    • "Margret Thatcher could get by on just a couple of hours."

      Five. And that's why she was insane.

    • Re:Einstein (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Branc0 ( 580914 )
      It would be interesting a poll to know how much the average geek sleeps.

      On work days i tend to sleep 5 to 7 hours but i compensate on weekend sleeping from 10 to 14 hours... don't know if it is the normal.

      I also read somewhere that oversleeping at weekend does not entirely compensate the lack of sleep trough the all week. Don't have a clue really, all i know is that by the end of the week it get's harder to concentrate.

    • Descartes (Score:3, Funny)

      by yintercept ( 517362 )
      Rene Descartes days ended when he took a job as a tutor to the Queen of who like to study philosophy early in the morning. Queen Christina liked to study philosophy early in the morning and would drag Descartes out of bed at 5:00 AM. Like a good philosopher Descartes believed in sleeping past noon. With the new schedule, he caught pneumonia and promptly died.
  • Countless times I have been stumped unable to compile a program I was writing or lost trying to finish up a program. The program keeps growing in lines, but I still never finish. I find if I goto sleep in those situations, I wake up with fresh ideas and a means to an end..

    I can remember doing that more than ever back when I was 13 programming with TurboC++ for my WWIV BBS. These days I use other methods to keep me on track, but I still find it happening.
  • by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:40AM (#8053951) Journal

    I find I solve a lot of bugs in the shower. Or while out buying lunch. Or anywhere that my brain is not engaged in the current task, but where that current task is something other than the bug I'm trying to fix.

    It's almost letting your subconscious thought processes work on the problem instead of trying to tackle it directly.

    The upshot is that I feel no shame in saying "I'm not going to fix that bug today. I'll fix it tomorrow" when I'm stumped on something. Or a tricky design problem, etc - works for most problem solving situations.

    Of course, this is all anecdotal..
    ~Cederic
  • by nob ( 244898 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:40AM (#8053954) Homepage
    I'm going to post something +5 Insightful, but I have to take a nap first. Check back later.
  • by RailGunner ( 554645 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:41AM (#8053959) Journal
    Isn't this a somewhat obvious result of the study? It makes sense that people who are well rested and refreshed from a good night sleep (or a timely nap) would be more alert and better able to think on their feet.

    Anyone who has ever crammed all night for a final knows how your brain seems to turn to mush after the test is over from the fatigue of it all.

    Who knows, maybe now that it's been scientifically proven, businesses will realize that people are actually more productive when not forced to work ridiculous amounts of mandatory, unpaid overtime.

    • by 1u3hr ( 530656 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:51AM (#8054065)
      Isn't this a somewhat obvious result of the study? It makes sense that people who are well rested and refreshed from a good night sleep (or a timely nap) would be more alert and better able to think on their feet.

      RTFA. They also tested a group that had slept, but not been exposed to the problem, and none of them solved it. Thinking about it before sleeping gave the best result.

    • Yes, this is a totally flawed experiment. All it proves is that when you've been awake for 16 hours straight, you're not as alert as someone who's just had a good sleep.

      They're missing another basic test, which is how many people found the "secret method" when allowed one double-length session of working, ie. without a sleep break between testing sessions.

      As far as the article goes as well, Coleridge wrote "Kublai Khan" under the influence of opium - sleep was a fairly minor issue!

      Grab.
  • by tuxette ( 731067 ) * <tuxette&gmail,com> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:41AM (#8053962) Homepage Journal
    I'll tell ya what sucks. Waking up in the middle of the night with all the world's greatest ideas and solutions to all the world's problems, and 1) not having a pencil and some paper nearby to write these ideas down, 2) being too lazy/groggy to get up and look for a pencil and paper, and 3) falling back asleep only to have forgotten everything when the alarm goes off.

    What's worse is when you actually do have pencils and paper nearby and you manage to scribble something down at 3 am., it's either illegible or utterly surreal at 8 am.

    • ....leave a pencil and some paper next to your bed!
    • by Mandomania ( 151423 ) <mondo@mando.org> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @01:31PM (#8057440) Homepage
      True story:

      When I was in high school, I had a dream that I was in this ancient-looking stone room. There were books all over the room, some piled in stacks and some just strewn about. There was a desk in the far corner, with a bunch of candles on it and a large book in the middle.

      Somehow, I knew that this was Merlin's study (I was in my King Arthur/Holy Grail/Knights Templar phase) and that the book held the answers to every question and secret I would ever have. I walked up to the desk and opened the book.

      The writing was incredibly blurry; almost like I was trying to read it without glasses. I squinted to try and clarify things, but it only made it worse. Then, I remember thinking "Hey, my eyes are closed! I just need to open them and I'll be able to read it.".

      So I opened my eyes and found myself staring at the ceiling of my bedroom.

      That was teh suck.
  • by Peter Cooper ( 660482 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:41AM (#8053965) Homepage Journal
    The other day I had to remember a name from ten years ago. I could picture the person but no name was forthcoming. Several hours later, while doing something quite menial, and not actively thinking about earlier, the name just suddenly appeared.

    A couple of friends remarked that this was quite common for them, but I'd never really thought of it before. It seems some dark area of your brain remembers tasks you're trying to achieve, or things you're trying to remember, and sets about working on them in the background, while you get on with something else entirely.

    This may be why people often come up with great ideas in the shower or while driving in the car, as their minds were 'set the task' earlier, and finally it's finished. Not too unlike a computer I guess, but certainly cool when you do it yourself. You realize that brain has a lot more tricks up its sleeve than are mentioned in the handbook.
  • Alternative title: (Score:3, Interesting)

    by CGP314 ( 672613 ) <CGP@NOSpAM.ColinGregoryPalmer.net> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:42AM (#8053969) Homepage
    After eight hours, where half the students were allowed to sleep and the other half remained awake, 60% of the rested and 22% of the wakeful students discovered the more efficient method."

    So... what you are saying is that sleep depravation inhibits problem solving?


    --
    In London? Need a Physics Tutor? [colingregorypalmer.net]

    American Weblog in London [colingregorypalmer.net]
  • A useful method (Score:4, Interesting)

    by HGWang ( 744252 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:43AM (#8053978)
    This method was employed by many creative people over the years. A famous case is the discovery of the molecular structure of benzene by Friedrich August von Kekule after he had a dream about snakes whirling. He famously said "Let us learn to dream, gentlemen." I like to use this technique myself to boost creativity.

    The method used to sleep actively on top is to slacken by using hypnosis, meditation, progressive relaxation or any other method which you know (a simple manner with the breath deeply several times all as affirming ). Now you speak the spirit without knowledge and ask for your spirit without knowledge to provide a solution during the night to you problem. Now let go from all the concern and go to sleep. It can be not also easy in the beginning to make this but with the practice you can become an expert with it.

    Have a paper and a pencil with range of the hand so that you can write your thoughts and solutions with your problem as soon as you awake. Just continue to practise this and each time you have success by solving your problems by the sleep on top you will amplify your self-esteem and will increase the probability of success the next time.
    • Re:A useful method (Score:3, Interesting)

      by k98sven ( 324383 )
      A famous case is the discovery of the molecular structure of benzene by Friedrich August von Kekule after he had a dream about snakes whirling.

      Famous, yes. But also generally regarded as apocryphal. It probably didn't happen.
  • ... being well slept keeps the mind clear? I thought that it was common knowledge, known for many years, well beyond having to experiment in this manner.

    I know that if I'm coding, and have been for a while, the old brain does slow down. Normally in those situations, with my alarm set to go off in 4 hours time, I decide to go to sleep. What happens to me is I normally figure out what I was trying to do in those glorious moments when my brain has given up trying to stay in a concious state.

    All too often I h
  • by snatchitup ( 466222 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:44AM (#8053989) Homepage Journal
    Because of this, I now realize why all my "Natalie Portman Squirming Nude in Hot Grits" dreams abruptly end with a Light Bulb Over her head, and just below that, a Do Loop, an equation, or the name of some obscure (.jar) file that has a utility for the previous day's problem.

  • I am thinking of something smart and funny to say here... but I haven't had my nap yet...
  • Your boss (Score:2, Redundant)

    by $exyNerdie ( 683214 )
    Print this article and keep a copy. Next time your boss catches you sleeping on the job, just show him/her the article and tell him/her that yo are just working on solving the problem

    • Re:Your boss (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Moraelin ( 679338 )
      Actually, more like keep a copy for next time when said boss thinks that 12 hour shifts, 7 days a week, actually brings anything except stress and lowered quality.

      More to the point, I don't know if some subconscious process during the sleep is really what helped those students there, or just the fact that:

      - group A was well rested when they went back at it, while

      - group B was ploughing ahead, after being already tired of 8 hours at it. (I.e., being every idiot PHB's ideal workers.)

      After a point, fatigue
  • Yes, this works (Score:5, Interesting)

    by heironymouscoward ( 683461 ) <heironymouscowar ... m ['oo.' in gap]> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:47AM (#8054016) Journal
    This happens so often with me it's almost a standard procedure. If I'm working late trying to fix a problem, debug a difficult issue, or find that really elegant solution to a tricky problem, I leave it until the next morning. Almost every time, the solution is then obvious, clear, and works immediately.

    Most likely it's because the unconcious mind needs space to work, and concentrating on the issue is counter-productive. Someone once wrote a nice article about why it helps to be stupid when you want to play football, because _thinking_ is not what you want to do when you're standing in front of the goal with an open shot.

    Similarly in more intellectual challenges, the subconcious mind does a large part of the work but needs to be left alone to do its thing.

    There are other ways to get the same effect:

    - playing music while working
    - going for a brisk walk (not heavy sport, because that tires you out)
    - smoking a joint (depends on the person but for many people this does the trick)
    - playing a game (solitaire?)

    But sleeping is definitely the best way, probably because the brain is designed to do exactly this.

    Incidentally, it works for social problems too. Having trouble with a colleague? Sleep on it, they say.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Incidentally, it works for social problems too. Having trouble with a colleague? Sleep on it, they say.

      Yeah, I was having trouble with this girl in the office, so I slept with her. Worked wonders, let me tell you.
  • this experiment is fundementally flawed... would it be that sleep is condusive to finding solutions or that exhaustion is detrimental to the ability to concentrate... it is fundementally flawed and no good at drawing conclusions...
  • I've figured out more algorithms/problems in my sleep than while awake. I've spent fruitless hours trying to figure them out awake, and then I dream a proper solution. Kinda weird, but maybe I can convince my boss to pay me for it somehow...

    Saw this on CNN yesterday and was able to find many examples of this type of behavior in my friends and family. The theories on memory and its storage while you sleep are really cool, actually.
  • by FearUncertaintyDoubt ( 578295 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @08:54AM (#8054087)
    I'm lazy. And I hate washing dishes. So what do I do with my dishes? I let them soak. You can replace a lot of scrubbing if you just let the dishes sit overnight in water.

    I also like to let my brain do the same things with problems. You can sweat and fret over some technical or even personal problem, and hack out a solution that seems like it's the best you have (and yet seems inadequate), or you just let it soak for a day or two or even a week. You never force it completely out of your mind, and occasionally bring it back to mull actively, but not too much more than just running your hands over the surface of it. One of those times, you feel a flash of inspiration, or a depth of understanding that wasn't there before, and that's when you close in for the kill. Your mind gets it.

    Anyway, that's the best I can do to use words to describe the proess I use to think and act creatively. I have found that my mind works in similar ways with regard to learning new things, such as juggling or a foreign language. I might practice my juggling for a week, and not see much progress, then take a week or two off. When I pick back up, lo, I've made a significant improvement.

  • I swear, some of the most effective thinkers I've known have had a notebook and pen hanging from a string within reach of the pot.

    I get some of my best ideas when I'm sitting on the can--maybe it's sort of the meditative aspect of just being in a sensory deprivation chamber, staring at tiles for a few minutes.
  • The results of the experiment suggest there may be a scientific basis to the anecdotes of sleep stimulating creative thinking throughout human history, such as:

    • Samuel Taylor Coleridge was inspired to write the epic poem Kubla Khan while asleep.

    I wonder if the example quoted in the article is appropriate. In a note added to a manuscript copy COLERIDGE himself added that the vision was "brought on by two grains of Opium..." [englishromantics.com] I think the key to "stimulating creative thinking" for Coleridge was differ

  • Back when the Rubic Cube came out, I had it nearly solved but was stumped as to how to move the bottom corners without disturbing the rest of the cube. On night, as I was going to sleep, I saw the cube floating in front of me. It was making the exact sequence of moves I was looking for. It would then reset and do it again - over and over. When I got up the next morning, I grabbed the cube and completed the solution in a matter of seconds.
    .
    . From that point, I knew that sleeping on a problem really worke
  • You don't think the guys who didn't sleep at all were too tired to even think at that point? naw of course not. Deprive me of a night's sleep and see how well I do anything.
    They didn't even have a control group.
  • I get about 4-6 hours of sleep a night just because I have so many projects (both home and work) that I am interested in, there just isn't enough time in a day.

    I do often wonder how some people are able to get so much accomplished within the same amount of hours I have (and possibly even sleep more)! One example is that I've got a friend who keeps a pretty decent blog going, takes more pictures per day than I do (between 200 and 500), writes and records his own music, is a webmaster for a hospital (his da
  • Or are the more rested people able to think more clearly. I'm not sure if I buy the "thought it up in a dream"... I think you can think more clearly when rested.
  • by Therlin ( 126989 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:08AM (#8054206)
    When I was a college student taking programming classes, I often woke up in the middle of the night with the solution to a programming problem. I'd then get up, write that piece of code and go back to sleep. I remember that one morning, I looked at the code I had written in the middle of the night and it made no sense. I knew it worked, but it made no sense.

    I often delay tough problems at least a day to let my brain work on them, and it works a lot of the time. Just yesterday I was trying to fix a bug with some code and gave up. Sure enough, this morning I had a fairly good idea on how to address the issue.
  • This indeed does work. Sleep is very useful for solving difficult problems. For example, suppose you were tasked with printing pi to 6 digits. The sleep-deprived program may do something inefficient, like using arctan formulas, or summing series, or using Pascal's method, or calling the Mathematica module.. etc. etc.. The sleep-enabled program would look something like this:

    printf ("Beginning calculation. Please wait.\n"); /* Look busy for a while */
    sleep(20)
    printf ("3.141592\n");
  • by John Harrison ( 223649 ) <johnharrison@@@gmail...com> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:15AM (#8054259) Homepage Journal
    In college I had a subtle bug in my solitaire game that was due the next morning. Finally I gave up and hoped that the grader wouldn't notice it. I went to sleep and woke up at 4am with the solution clearly in my head. I sat down at the computer and in 10 minutes the program worked flawlessly. This wasn't a one-line fix. It was something that pervaded most of the code. I was shocked that I had solved a problem this complex while sleeping.

    I have also played some excellent games of Tetris in my sleep, but that doesn't seem nearly as interesting.


    • I have also played some excellent games of Tetris in my sleep, but that doesn't seem nearly as interesting.

      I've run into a number of people now that have said this. Once, I was writing a tetris clone to hone my Tcl/Tk skills and during two weeks of intensive coding (for me), I played tetris in my dreams almost every single night. It really helped my actual Tetris playing too. I achieved high scores that I could have never gotten as a kid and haven't to this day been able me match.

      Obligatory link: http:/
  • by herrvinny ( 698679 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:19AM (#8054293)
    Saw this story yesterday on ABCNEWS.com [abcnews.com], Study: Sleep Essential for Creative Thinking, Sharper Memories [go.com]. The thing I didn't understand was, didn't we already know this before? Students who sleep more tend to get better grades, students who sleep less, don't? But remember, as anyone who has taken an elementary logic or stats course, the first thing they teach you is: causation != correlation. For example, in the above instance, it could be that students who sleep less are from poorer families, and have to work more (read: jobs), thereby getting less sleep, while people who get more sleep are from more wealthy families, etc. I'd be interested in seeing the real study data instead of just a news article. Here's a paragraph from the ABCNEWS article that I thought was interesting:

    History is dotted with incidents where artists and scientists have awakened to make their most notable contributions after long periods of frustration. For example, that's how Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev established the periodic table of elements and British poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote his epic "Kubla Khan."
  • by Mark_in_Brazil ( 537925 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:25AM (#8054353)
    Quoth the article:
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge was inspired to write the epic poem Kubla Khan while asleep

    Uh, no.

    Coleridge was in an opium-induced stupor when he got the inspiration for the poem. Here are some sources that back this up (including comments from the poet himself):
    You can read about the poem and its origins here [richardhillmusic.co.uk], or you can read original notes on the poem from the author and others who knew him here [virginia.edu]. You can also read the original poem here [virginia.edu].

    --Mark
  • by Snags ( 18929 ) * on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:32AM (#8054449) Journal
    In Nature, volume 427 (2004), p352, they describe the actual problem given to the test subjects.

    Take an 8-digit string formed from the numbers 1, 4, and 9. A series of two-digit comparisons is done. The result of the comparison is the same digit if they are the same, or the "missing" digit if they are different. That is, 1 1 -> 1, while 1 4 -> 9.

    Start by comparing the first two digits, and from then on, compare your current result with the next digit in the string. Their example is 11449494, which leads to the results 1, 9, 1, 4, 4, 1, 9. The last result is the final answer.

    The trick is that the original strings were "generated in such a way that the ... second [result] coincided with the final solution." People who found this trick were deemed to have gained insight into the pattern.

    I think the study is bogus because of this. Sure, some people will notice the pattern, but careful people might choose to carry out the full calculation anyway, just to make sure. Any given string could follow the pattern or not. What they're demonstrating is how easily people can be tricked into finding patterns that may or may not be there. This kind of learning leads to racial profiling --- the result of the easy observation (race) implies the result of the more difficult one (criminality).

  • by cjmckenzie ( 602090 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @09:46AM (#8054592)
    It's not just a matter of relaxation, although that does have psychological effects. However, during REM sleep (when dreaming occurs) the brain synthesizes proteins that form long term memory. Long and short term memory are actually physiologically different. Short term memory are synapses created throughout the day on the fly, long term memory is created during REM sleep or during times when you may be zoning out (this is controversial). If finding innovative solutions can be statistically broken down as propotional to the amount of nueral connections involved in the processing of the question in the solution space, then it would make sense that people that sleep in REM sleep, which has a much higher level of brain activity, would be more apt to finding the innovative solution. However, it's nice to see that there are numbers that back this up.
  • Tetris Experiment (Score:4, Insightful)

    by RealRav ( 607677 ) on Thursday January 22, 2004 @12:23PM (#8056485)
    I remember reading about an experiment a couple of years ago. A group of people who had never played Tetris before were asked to do so, in a controlled environment, every day for a period of time. The people who had vivid dreams about the game showed a marked improvement where the others did not.

    I believe that dreaming is a way of working through our problems and possibly indexing our memories.

    Dreams are better as dreams than reality.

  • by Dave21212 ( 256924 ) <dav@spamcop.net> on Thursday January 22, 2004 @04:08PM (#8059585) Homepage Journal

    I read the article this morning and decided to take a nap before replying...

    - - - - I just woke up and this is all I could come up with to say ?!

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