Question
Urika has slept terribly the past
3
nights as some neighbors have had visitors in town and been up making noise all night long. When she finally does get to sleep again, it is likely that she will:
spend more time in REM sleep.
spend more time in stage
1
sleep.
take more time to transition between stage
2
and stage
3
sleep.
remember her dreams.
3
nights as some neighbors have had visitors in town and been up making noise all night long. When she finally does get to sleep again, it is likely that she will:
spend more time in REM sleep.
spend more time in stage
1
sleep.
take more time to transition between stage
2
and stage
3
sleep.
remember her dreams.
Answers
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
When Urika finally gets to sleep again after several nights of poor sleep, it is likely that she will **spend more time in REM sleep**. This phenomenon is known as "REM rebound," where the body compensates for lost REM sleep by increasing the duration of REM stages during subsequent sleep sessions.
The other options are less likely: typically, an individual does not spend significantly more time in stage 1 sleep or take more time to transition between stages after sleep deprivation. Remembering dreams can occur regardless of sleep quality, but the increase in REM sleep is the most notable response to prior sleep loss.
The other options are less likely: typically, an individual does not spend significantly more time in stage 1 sleep or take more time to transition between stages after sleep deprivation. Remembering dreams can occur regardless of sleep quality, but the increase in REM sleep is the most notable response to prior sleep loss.