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TED英语演讲稿我们为什么要睡觉Word文件下载.docx

1、d like to do today is talk about one of my favorite subjects, and that is the neuroscience of sleep. Now, there is a sound - (Alarm clock) - aah, it worked - a sound that is desperately, desperately familiar to most of us, and of course its the sound of the alarm clock. And what that truly ghastly,

2、awful sound does is stop the single most important behavioral experience that we have, and thats sleep. If youre an average sort of person, 36 percent of your life will be spent asleep, which means that if you live to 90, then 32 years will have been spent entirely asleep. Now what that 32 years is

3、telling us is that sleep at some level is important. And yet, for most of us, we dont give sleep a second thought. We throw it away. We really just dont think about sleep. And so what Id like to do today is change your views, change your ideas and your thoughts about sleep. And the journey that I wa

4、nt to take you on, we need to start by going back in time. Enjoy the honey-heavy dew of slumber. Any ideas who said that? Shakespeares Julius Caesar. Yes, let me give you a few more quotes. O sleep, O gentle sleep, natures soft nurse, how have I frighted thee? Shakespeare again, from - I wont say it

5、 - the Scottish play. Correction: Henry IV, Part 2 (Laughter) From the same time: Sleep is the golden chain that ties health and our bodies together. Extremely prophetic, by Thomas Dekker, another Elizabethan dramatist. But if we jump forward 400 years, the tone about sleep changes somewhat. This is

6、 from Thomas Edison, from the beginning of the 20th century. Sleep is a criminal waste of time and a heritage from our cave days. Bang. (Laughter) And if we also jump into the 1980s, some of you may remember that Margaret Thatcher was reported to have said, Sleep is for wimps. And of course the infa

7、mous - what was his name? - the infamous Gordon Gekko from Wall Street said, Money never sleeps. What do we do in the 20th century about sleep? Well, of course, we use Thomas Edisons light bulb to invade the night, and we occupied the dark, and in the process of this occupation, weve treated sleep a

8、s an illness, almost. Weve treated it as an enemy. At most now, I suppose, we tolerate the need for sleep, and at worst perhaps many of us think of sleep as an illness that needs some sort of a cure. And our ignorance about sleep is really quite profound. Why is it? Why do we abandon sleep in our th

9、oughts? Well, its because you dont do anything much while youre asleep, it seems. You dont eat. You dont drink. And you dont have sex. Well, most of us anyway. And so therefore its - Sorry. Its a complete waste of time, right? Wrong. Actually, sleep is an incredibly important part of our biology, an

10、d neuroscientists are beginning to explain why its so very important. So lets move to the brain. Now, here we have a brain. This is donated by a social scientist, and they said they didnt know what it was, or indeed how to use it, so - (Laughter) Sorry. So I borrowed it. I dont think they noticed. O

11、kay. (Laughter) The point Im trying to make is that when youre asleep, this thing doesnt shut down. In fact, some areas of the brain are actually more active during the sleep state than during the wake state. The other thing thats really important about sleep is that it doesnt arise from a single st

12、ructure within the brain, but is to some extent a network property, and if we flip the brain on its back - I love this little bit of spinal cord here - this bit here is the hypothalamus, and right under there is a whole raft of interesting structures, not least the biological clock. The biological c

13、lock tells us when its good to be up, when its good to be asleep, and what that structure does is interact with a whole raft of other areas within the hypothalamus, the lateral hypothalamus, the ventrolateral preoptic nuclei. All of those combine, and they send projections down to the brain stem her

14、e. The brain stem then projects forward and bathes the cortex, this wonderfully wrinkly bit over here, with neurotransmitters that keep us awake and essentially provide us with our consciousness. So sleep arises from a whole raft of different interactions within the brain, and essentially, sleep is

15、turned on and off as a result of a range of Okay. So where have we got to? Weve said that sleep is complicated and it takes 32 years of our life. But what I havent explained is what sleep is about. So why do we sleep? And it wont surprise any of you that, of course, the scientists, we dont have a consensus. There are dozens of different ideas about why we sleep, and Im going to outline three of those. The first is sort of the restoration idea, and its somewhat intuitive. Essentially, all the stuff weve burned up during the day, we restore, we replace, we rebuild

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