| |
After all of
the 30-second epochs for the patient described previously were
scored for wake or sleep stage, they were entered into the computer
to create a nighttime summary. The time spent in each stage (minutes
across the night) is totaled in a sequential episodic way across
time or as a percent of the total time designated as sleeping
after falling asleep. This graph indicates the time spent in each
sleep stage and the cycling through stages during the night (Pressman
et al., 1997). On the graph you will see a repetitive sequence
of going from awake or non-REM sleep stages into REM sleep (dark
horizontal bar). Each REM stage end signals the end of a complete
sleep cycle. Not all cycles include entering stages 3 & 4
(deep sleep).
| Figure
1.8.1: The Normal Sleep Pattern of a Young Adult
|
|---|
|
|
|
|
|
| How many complete sleep cycles are depicted on this graph? |
| |
 | 3 |
 | 4 |
 | 5 |
|
|
| The
approximate range of the sleep cycle duration is: |
| | |
 | 1 - 1.5 hours |
 | 1.5 - 2 hours |
 | 2 - 3 hours |
|
|
| After falling asleep, how many times did this person
wake up before final awakening? |
| | |
 | 1 |
 | 5 |
 | 6 |
|
|
| This graph suggests that for young adults more deep sleep
(delta, SWS) occurs in the early part of the night. |
| | |
 | True |
 | False |
|
|
| This graph suggests that for young adults there is proportionally
less REM sleep within a cycle as the nighttime sleep period
lengthens. |
| | |
 | True |
 | False |
|
|
| This graph suggests that over the night, young adults
spend roughly 50% of the sleep time in light sleep and 15-20%
in deep sleep. |
| | |
 | True |
 | False |
|