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Volume 64, Issue 1, Pages 130-132 (2005)


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Mammalian sleep may have no adaptive advantage over simple activity-rest cycles

Antoni Gamundı́aCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Mourad Akaârira, Anton M.L. Coenenb, Susana Estebana, Rubén V. Riala, Marı́a C. Nicolaua

Received 20 January 2003; accepted 3 May 2004. published online 19 August 2004.

Abstract 

The adaptive value of sleep remains unknown in spite of the intense research performed throughout the last decades. However, few sleep researchers are aware of the difficulties posed by the blind acceptance of an extreme adaptationist viewpoint. Under this philosophy, every anatomical and functional detail present in a living being should have a positive adaptive value, a position that has been considered as rather doubtful. In this report, it is proposed that most of the physiological changes used for mammalian sleep definition could be mere by-products of other true adaptations, such as the ontogenetic and phylogenetic development of the nervous system. As a result, complex mammalian sleep could have no adaptive value over that of the simplest forms of rest-activity cycles present in all living forms. In addition, it is proposed that the absence of adaptive value should, by default, be the first option regarding the function of sleep. Besides, the burden of the proof should be always charged over the proponents of every particular adaptive function. As this proof has not been reached, it is the absence of function for sleep which should be taken for granted.

a Area de Fisiologia, Universitat de les Illes Balears, 07122 Palma de Mallorca, Spain

b Department of Biological Psychology (NICI), Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +34-971172318; fax: +34-971172309

PII: S0306-9877(04)00340-8

doi:10.1016/j.mehy.2004.05.007


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