Onze hersenen, hoe we in slaap vallen en hypnagoge hallucinaties...

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Onze hersenen, hoe we in slaap vallen en hypnagoge hallucinaties...

Uit recent onderzoek blijkt dat, als we in slaap vallen, eerst de thalamus inactief wordt en pas daarna de cortex.

De thalamus heeft ahw. een relayfunctie, waarbij binnenkomende prikkels naar de juiste hersenzones worden gestuurd. De cortex daarentegen staat in voor onze hogere functies (denken ed.).


Doordat de thalamus als eerste uitvalt, is onze cortex, net voor we dan tenslotte écht in slaap vallen, nog even in staat om onze gedachten een tijdje te laten 'rondzwalpen' van het en naar het andere.

Die fase waarin onze gedachten nog even van het ene naar het andere kunnen rondzwalpen, zou ook de fase zijn waarin sommige mensen hallucinaties ervaren. In dit geval dan de bekende hypnagoge hallucinaties...
They found that as people drifted off to sleep, the deep brain area the thalamus wound down several minutes before the cortex.

This is surprising because the thalamus has traditionally been considered a structure that regulates alertness and 'relays' information to the rest of the brain from the body and the spinal cord.

It was often assumed that it would 'shut down' the cortex first, because this is often considered to be where our 'higher' conscious functions like abstract thought and complex perception lie, while continuing with its minimal vigilance functions. A bit like a neural 'standby' setting.

Instead, what seems to happen is that the thalamus 'disconnects' itself and leaves the cortex freewheeling before it finally settles down into inactivity.

Indeed, freewheeling is, perhaps, a good description here. The researchers found lots of uneven activity in the upper brain areas as they were left to drift off.


Interestingly, sleep onset is one of the times when we are most likely to experience hallucinations. In fact, they are so common as to have been given their own name - hypnagogic hallucinations - while this drifting off period is known as hypnagogia.

Although they didn't specifically ask about the whimsical thoughts and unusual perceptions that typically occur in this state, the researchers speculate that this pattern of freewheeling close-down might explain why hallucinations are so common at this time.
uit: Human brain electrodes capture the twilight zone (Mind Hacks)

abstract: Magnin, Rey et all, Thalamic deactivation at sleep onset precedes that of the cerebral cortex in humans, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010 Feb 8


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