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Sleep Stages
  • Stage 1 (N1) is the lightest stage of sleep and occurs as a person first falls asleep.
  • Stage 2 (N2) is where the body starts to relax more deeply. Body temperature drops, muscles relax, and heart and breathing rate slow.
  • Stage 3 (N3 or deep sleep) is the deepest and more restorative sleep, allowing the body to recover and grow.
  • Stage 4 (REM Sleep) is where most dreaming occurs, brain activity increases, and the body becomes temporarily paralyzed.

When thinking about getting the sleep you need, it’s normal to focus on solely how many hours of sleep you get. While sleep duration is undoubtedly important, it’s not the only part of the equation. You should also consider sleep quality and whether the time spent sleeping is actually restorative.

There are four sleep stages, including one for rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and three that form non-REM (NREM) sleep, and each plays a part in allowing you to wake up refreshed. Understanding the sleep cycle also helps explain how certain sleep disorders, including insomnia and obstructive sleep apnea, can impact a person’s sleep and health.

What Is the Sleep Cycle?

A normal sleep cycle graph showing the time spent in N1, N2, N3, and REM stages of sleep.
A normal sleep cycle graph showing the time spent in N1, N2, N3, and REM stages of sleep.

Sleep isn’t uniform. Over the course of the night, you go through several rounds of the sleep cycle, which is composed of four stages. In a typical night, a person goes through four to six sleep cycles . Not all sleep cycles are the same length, but on average they last about 90 minutes each.

The first sleep cycle is often the shortest, ranging from 70 to 100 minutes, while later cycles tend to fall between 90 and 120 minutes. In addition, the composition of each cycle — how much time is spent in each phase of sleep — changes as the night goes along.

Sleep cycles can vary from person to person and from night to night based on a wide range of factors such as age, recent sleep patterns, and alcohol consumption.

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What Are the Stages of Sleep?

There are four phases of sleep, including one for rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and three that form non-REM (NREM) sleep. These stages are determined based on an analysis of brain activity during sleep, which shows distinct patterns that characterize each stage.

Sleep StageType of SleepOther Name(s)Average Length
Stage 1NREMN11 to 7 minutes
Stage 2NREMN210 to 25 minutes
Stage 3NREMN3, slow-wave sleep (SWS), delta sleep, deep sleep20 to 40 minutes
Stage 4REMREM sleep10 to 60 minutes

The breakdown of a person’s sleep into various cycles and stages is commonly referred to as sleep architecture. If someone undergoes a sleep study, their sleep architecture can be represented visually in a hypnogram, or graph.

What Are the Stages of Non-REM Sleep?

NREM sleep is composed of three different stages. The higher the stage of NREM sleep, the harder it is to wake a person up.

Stage 1 (N1)

Stage 1, also called N1, occurs when a person first falls asleep and usually lasts one to seven minutes. During N1 sleep, the body hasn’t fully relaxed, though the body and brain activities start to slow with periods of brief movements. There are light changes in brain activity associated with falling asleep in this stage.

It’s easy to wake someone up during this phase of sleep, but if a person isn’t disturbed, they can move quickly into stage 2. As the night unfolds, an uninterrupted sleeper may not spend much more time in stage 1 as they move through further sleep cycles.

Stage 2 (N2)

During stage 2, or N2, the body enters a more subdued state where body temperature drops, muscles relax, and heart rate and breathing slow. At the same time, eye movement stops and brain activity slows, though there are short bursts of activity that help your resist being woken up by external stimuli.

Stage 2 sleep can last for 10 to 25 minutes during the first sleep cycle, and each N2 stage can become longer during the night. Collectively, a person typically spends about half their sleep time in N2 sleep.

Stage 3 (N3 or Deep Sleep)

Stage 3 sleep is also known as N3 or deep sleep, and it’s harder to wake someone up if they’re in this phase. Muscle tone, pulse, and breathing rate decrease in N3 sleep, and brain activity has an identifiable pattern of what are known as delta waves. For this reason, stage 3 may also be called delta sleep or slow-wave sleep (SWS).

Experts believe that this stage is critical to restorative sleep, allowing for bodily recovery and growth. It may also bolster the immune system and other key bodily processes. Even though brain activity is reduced, there’s evidence that deep sleep contributes to insightful thinking , creativity , and memory.

You spend the most time in deep sleep during the first half of the night. During the early sleep cycles, N3 stages commonly last for 20 to 40 minutes. As you continue sleeping, these stages get shorter, and more time gets spent in REM sleep instead.

What Happens During REM Sleep?

During stage 4, also called REM sleep, brain activity picks up, nearing levels seen when you’re awake. At the same time, the body experiences atonia, which is a temporary paralysis of the muscles, with two exceptions: the eyes and the muscles that control breathing. Even though they’re closed, the eyes move rapidly, which is how this stage gets its name.

REM sleep is believed to be essential to cognitive functions like memory , learning, and creativity . REM sleep is known for the most vivid dreams, which is explained by the significant uptick in brain activity. Dreams can occur in any sleep stage, but they’re less common and intense in the NREM periods.

Under normal circumstances, you don’t enter a REM sleep until you’ve been asleep for about 90 minutes. As the night goes on, REM stages get longer, especially in the second half of the night. While the first REM stage may last only a few minutes, later stages can last for around an hour. In total, REM stages make up around 25% of sleep in adults.

Why Do the Sleep Stages Matter?

Sleep stages are important because they allow the brain and body to recover and grow. Failure to get enough of both deep sleep and REM sleep may explain some of the profound consequences of insufficient sleep on thinking , emotions, and physical health.

Sleepers who are frequently awoken during earlier stages, such as people with sleep apnea, may struggle to properly cycle into these deeper phases of sleep. People with insomnia may not get enough total sleep to accumulate the needed time in each stage.

What Affects Sleep Stages?

While there’s a typical pattern for sleep stages, there can be substantial individual variation based on a number of factors .

  • Age: Time in each stage changes dramatically over a person’s life. Newborns spend far more time in REM sleep and may enter a REM stage as soon as they fall asleep. As they get older, their sleep becomes similar to that of adults. Older adults tend to spend less time in REM sleep.
  • Recent sleep patterns: If a person gets irregular or insufficient sleep over a period of days or more, it can cause an abnormal sleep cycle.
  • Alcohol: Alcohol and some other drugs can alter sleep architecture. For example, alcohol decreases REM sleep early in the night, but as the alcohol wears off, there’s a REM sleep rebound, with prolonged REM stages.
  • Sleep disorders: Sleep apnea, restless legs syndrome (RLS), and other conditions that cause multiple awakenings may interrupt a healthy sleep cycle.

How Can You Have a Healthier Sleep Cycle?

While you don’t have full control of your sleep cycle, you can take steps to improve your chances of having a healthy progression through each sleep stage. A key step is to focus on improving your sleep hygiene, which refers to your sleep environment  and sleep-related habits.

  • Aim for a more consistent sleep schedule.
  • Get natural daylight exposure.
  • Avoid alcohol before bedtime
  • Eliminate noise and light disruptions.
  • Invest in supportive and comfortable sleep system (mattress, pillows, and sheets).

If you find that you have excessive daytime sleepiness or otherwise suspect that you might have a sleep disorder like sleep apnea, it’s important to talk with a doctor who can most appropriately guide your care. Addressing underlying issues may pave the way for more complete and restorative sleep cycles.

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References
8 Sources

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  6. Cai, D. J., Mednick, S. A., Harrison, E. M., Kanady, J. C., & Mednick, S. C. (2009). REM, not incubation, improves creativity by priming associative networks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 106(25), 10130–10134.

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