Aha! The Power Of A Short Rest - podcast episode cover

Aha! The Power Of A Short Rest

Jun 27, 20259 minEp. 1298
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Summary

Discover how even a short nap can lead to a "eureka" moment, according to new research on sleep stages. Plus, hear about the groundbreaking image of a young exoplanet still within its formation disk. Finally, learn about a study revealing that wildfires can impact water quality for nearly a decade after they occur.

Episode description

Since 2004, scientific research has shown that a full night of sleep may lend itself to a burst of insight in the morning. But what about the earlier stages of sleep? And what about just a nap? A research team based in Germany found that even a 20-minute nap could deliver a "eureka" moment, and published their findings in the journal PLOS Biology this week.

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Transcript

Intro / Opening

This message comes from Meta AI. The new Meta AI app is built to get to know you, basing its responses on your preferences and interests. Get help anytime with Meta AI, your personal AI. Download the Meta AI app today. Now available on the Apple App Store and Google Play. You're listening to Shortwave from NPR. Hey, Short Waivers, Regina Barber here. And Emily Kwong. With our biweekly science news roundup featuring...

My brother from the Pacific Northwest, Ari Shapiro from All Things Considered. My sister from Another Mister. That's right. So good to be here, especially because I hear we've got a story about naps, which I just love, how they can help solve a problem. This podcast would not be made without naps. Yes, we also have a story on an important picture of an exoplanet. Yes, and how wildfires can impact water quality nearly a decade after they burn.

All of that on this episode of Shortwave, science podcast from NPR. This message comes from Meta AI. Meta AI is the personal AI to help you with whatever you need. Not only is Meta AI now an app, but it's also on the apps you already love. Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, and Messenger, plus the Ray-Ban Meta glasses. It's easy to access wherever you are throughout the day. Experience Meta's newest AI that's tailored to you by downloading the Meta AI app.

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The Science of Insightful Naps

All right, all right. Where do you want to start? I love any reason to take a nap. Are you about to give me another reason proven by science? It's your lucky day. You know how when you're stuck on a problem, the common wisdom is sleep on it?

Yeah, sure. Like you wake up and have some insight you didn't have when you went to bed. Yes. RE Science backs this up. A full night of sleep may lend itself to a burst of insight. And a group of researchers in Germany wanted to know more about the stages of sleep involved in a eureka month. Could an app be enough to deliver us that aha? How do you actually measure a eureka moment scientifically?

Yeah, good question. Okay, so researchers invited study participants to track a group of dots on a screen and decide whether the dots were generally moving towards one of the four corners of the screen. The correct response was paired with a color. Without knowing that trick, though, the task was kind of tough. So in the middle of the task, the researchers let the participants take a 20-minute break in a room with the lights off.

Seated upon the most comfortable IKEA chair that cognitive neuroscientist Annika Löwe could find. Yeah, we also told people to sleep 30% less the night before and not consume any caffeine before coming in at 1pm. So very primed to fall asleep. Yeah, exactly. Participants were also hooked up to an electrode cap to measure their brain activity. Some stayed awake, some fell asleep, and then they were asked to return to the task and discovered something kind of amazing. Yeah.

Ari, those who napped figured out the color trick at a higher frequency. And those who managed to enter the first phase of deep sleep, known as the N2 phase, had the highest frequency of insight. 86% of those deep sleepers had their eureka moment. So they cracked the color code, they solved the task, and they only napped for like 20 minutes max. Yeah, that's right. Amazing. So on the level of brain chemistry...

How does deep sleep, even for a brief period of time, lead to these breakthroughs? Yeah, that's the next question this team and others want to investigate. Anika told me... the leading theory is that deep sleep consolidates what you learned. So maybe in deep sleep, irrelevant synaptic connections are pruned away and relevant connections remain so that upon waking, that might set our brain up for a breakthrough.

Imaging a Newborn Exoplanet

Yeah, but this theory, of course, would have to be tested with more sleep research. Sign me up. I'm happy to be paid to sleep. Okay, next story. Gina, what is so special about this newborn baby distant planet? Yes. Okay, so it's a planet beyond our solar system.

orbiting another star. That's what's called an exoplanet. And astronomers have found thousands of exoplanets before, but this one is special because one, this exoplanet was actually seen in an image, which is really hard to do. And two, astronomers took this picture while the... exoplanet was still in this leftover disk of gas and dust it was formed from. The researchers published this image in the journal Nature this week.

Yeah, and astrophysicist Alicia Weinberger, who didn't work on this study, said the image helps clarify a big missing piece of the planet formation puzzle. We have only a few examples of stars that have both a disk and a planet where we can really look at that interplay and how one is influencing the other. And so does this new evidence fit the conventional wisdom about how planets form? Yes, yeah. So scientists have a very good hypothesis that, like, planets...

form inside this disk of gas and dust. It's left over from, like, the star forming, actually. And these disks look like pancakes of light around a very young star. That's why all the planets in our own solar system are in a plane. They came from a similar pancake. Yes, it's very delicious. pancake. But sometimes there are gaps in the disks that are thought to be created from planets forming. And until now, scientists haven't been able to capture a planet in a gap on camera.

So now that it's been caught on camera, what can we learn about this exoplanet? We can learn about its atmosphere, for one, which tells us more about what it's made out of. We've talked to multiple astrophysicists for the story, and they all think that this image is just the beginning.

that eventually the James Webb Space Telescope will reveal, like, the whole process of how a planet forms. Yet another insight thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope, which is so much better than any that came before, huh? Yeah. So much. I mean, it's sensitive enough to get an image of an exoplanet.

this small, about 30% of the size of Jupiter. The exoplanet is still bigger than Earth, but photographing a planet formation this small is a step towards finding even smaller planets closer to the size of Earth in our galaxy.

Wildfires' Long-Term Water Impact

Yeah, and a planet closer to the size of Earth is more likely to be hospitable to life. Well, let's come back to Earth for our third and final story, which is about how wildfires affect water quality. We heard about this a lot during the Southern California wildfires. What's the new insight here? Yes. So a study came out this week in the journal Nature Communications and Environment, which suggests that water impacts can linger nearly a decade after wildfire flames die down.

Especially when it comes to contaminants left behind by the fires, like sediment or nitrogen. A decade's a long time. How did they figure that out? Yeah, the researchers analyzed hundreds of watersheds and compared areas that have been burned in wildfires to areas that were unburned. But they used data from across four decades. They collected data between 1984 and 2021, which is a big deal.

since like most wildfire studies have looked at a smaller window of time, two to three years like after a fire. And a watershed, by the way, they're very important. It's an area of land that collects water from rain or snowmelt and eventually channels water into a larger body like a reservoir.

Watersheds provide around two-thirds of the U.S. population's clean water supply. So knowing the state of a watershed could be a good way to measure the aftermath of a fire. Yes, exactly. I know fires are becoming more intense and more frequent. to human-caused climate change, what kinds of contaminants are sticking around long after a fire?

Yeah, the authors saw that carbon and phosphorus stuck around for up to like five years after a fire, while nitrogen and sediment were detected in the watersheds for up to eight years, all of which in excessive amounts can be harmful to humans and ecosystems. Water utilities filter water before it reaches our faucets. So what does this mean for those of us who are, I don't know, taking showers and drinking water?

Yeah, so one of the study authors, Ben Livna, at University of Colorado Boulder said that listeners shouldn't worry about water quality, but water utility companies should be extra aware of these contaminants for a long time after a wildfire takes place.

They should perhaps pivot to use a new supply depending on where the watershed is. Or use this information to be better prepared for future fires and help build water systems that are more resilient towards fire. And this data could help them do that. Which is going to be even more necessary as the planet heats up. Yeah, definitely. Thank you so much for hanging out with us. It's always so fun and educational.

You can hear more of Ari Shapiro on Consider This and PR's afternoon podcast about what the news means for you. And while you're checking out Consider This, why don't you hit follow on the NPR shortwave feed, on the NPR app, or whatever podcasting platform you wish, so you'll never miss an episode. And if you like this one, share it with a friend. This episode was produced by Megan Lim and Rachel Carlson. It was edited by Rebecca Ramirez and Patrick Jaron Watanon.

Tyler Jones, check the facts. Ko Takasugi Chernowan and Tiffany Vera Castro were the audio engineers. I'm Emily Kwong. And I'm Regina Barber. Thank you for listening to Shortwave, the science podcast from NPR. This message comes from Thrive Market. The food industry is a multi-billion dollar industry, but not everything on the shelf is made with your health in mind.

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