Submitted:
08 September 2025
Posted:
09 September 2025
Read the latest preprint version here
Abstract
Keywords:
Significance Statement
AI Peer Review
1. Introduction
2. Methodology
- Easy to test empirically. Allows the scientist to formulate hypotheses that generate specific predictions that can be corroborated or refuted by empirical evidence.
- Logical rigor. The chain “theory ⇒ hypotheses ⇒ specific predictions ⇒ empirical testing” provides methodological rigor and allows us to critically evaluate predictions.
- Cumulative corroboration. In the case of theories that resist successive attempts at refutation, they accumulate a greater number of corroborations, giving rise to new research and hypotheses that expand and refine the theoretical framework.
- Reproducibility. Due to the specific predictions, other researchers can test the hypotheses to verify if they obtain the same results, thus strengthening the reliability of the results obtained.
- Experimental orientation. The H-D method encourages scientists to design controlled and reproducible experiments. This also helps strengthen the reliability of the results obtained.
- Interdisciplinary flexibility. With appropriate caveats (see below), we can apply this method in different scientific fields.
- It is not immune to the sampling problem. Although the core of the H-D method is deductive reasoning, it is not entirely devoid of induction (see below). This makes it necessary to address the challenges inherent in the representative sample that the scientist has to select from a population.
- It prevents us, in its strictest sense, from confirming a theory. While excellent for falsification, the H-D method, taken literally, is exclusively negative: it allows us to be certain that certain theories are false, but prevents us from being certain (or as certain as possible) that a theory is true or probable (Marconi and Lakatos, 2021, p. 98; Sokal and Bricmont, 2016, p. 73). In other words, even if we have voluminous concordant results, they are incapable of confirming a hypothesis or theory. All they can do is indicate that we have not yet refuted it.
- It depends on auxiliary hypotheses. False-negative results can result from flaws in experimental design or in data interpretation. Moreover, the H-D method also relies on assumptions concerning mechanisms, measuring instruments, laboratory conditions, et cetera.
- Without appropriate caveats, it is inadequate for certain sciences. The H-D method is particularly unsuitable for testing probabilistic theories, a variety that, as Mayr (2001, p. 49) pointed out, includes the majority of biological theories. Any exceptions scientists may find to probabilistic theories do not necessarily indicate that those theories have been falsified. In the case of sciences such as evolutionary biology, for instance, it is difficult, and perhaps even impossible, to conclusively falsify certain theories (Mayr, 2001, p. 49).
- In its strict sense, it is inflexible to nuance. For a strict Popperian, a theory or hypothesis can be refuted by a single reliable observation that refutes it (Laudan, 1977, p. 26; Marconi and Lakatos, 2021, p. 98; Sokal and Bricmont, 2016, p. 72). In other words, the H-D method—combined with radical falsificationism—demands that we categorically abandon a theory or hypothesis if a single well-conducted study yields negative results. This inflexibility may work for the exact sciences; however, as Mayr (2001, p. 50) pointed out, it is inappropriate for sciences such as biology—especially evolutionary biology.
- Multiple compatibility problem. A single set of evidence may be compatible with more than one alternative hypothesis or theory, making it difficult for scientists to determine more easily which explanation is correct. For instance, scientists may use the fact that brain temperature increases during REM sleep (Ungurean et al., 2020; Wehr, 1992) to support the hypothesis that the function of REM sleep is to regulate brain temperature. However, this same evidence also supports the explanation that such warming occurs due to increased blood flow (Parmeggiani, 2007; Pastukhov and Ekimova, 2012). For this reason, the H-D method often requires that we rely on independent and additional evidence and arguments—a strategy I adopted in this Paper to deal with this limitation. (See Section 5, where I discuss the issue of brain warming during REM sleep.)
3. N-REM Sleep Is Highly Necessary, But Dangerous
4. The Sentinel Sleep Theory: Hypotheses and Predictions
| Facts and inferences* | References | |
|---|---|---|
| Fact No. 1: | Emotions serve to ensure (directly or indirectly) the organism's survival; among other effects, they make the organism less vulnerable to predation, thereby contributing to its survival. (Emphasis on the fight-or-flight response.) | Chand et al., 2021; Chu et al., 2024; Damasio, 2003, pp. 34-35, 53; Damasio, 2015, pp. 51-53; Damasio, 2019, pp. 56-65; Dhabhar, 2018; Gazzaniga et al., 2016, p. 416; Moyne et al., 2022; Wolpert, 2008. |
| Fact No. 2: | N-REM sleep reduces both environmental alertness and emotional responsiveness, leaving the organism highly vulnerable to predation, thus risking its survival. | Anafi et al., 2019; Bear et al., 2016, p. 659; Capellini et al., 2008; Gazzaniga et al., 2016, p. 148; Moyne et al., 2022; Nath et al., 2017; Rattenborg and Ungurean, 2023. |
| Fact No. 3: | N-REM sleep is a non-negotiable necessity for organisms with a nervous system, even if decentralized. In other words, N-REM cannot be eliminated in animals with a nervous system, as it is required for the brain to function properly and for the animal to survive. | Cirelli and Tononi, 2008; Jaggard et al., 2021; Kandel et al., 2021, p. 1097; Libourel and Herrel, 2016; Mignot, 2008; Nath et al., 2017; Urry et al., 2020, p. 1094; Vyazovskiy and Harris, 2013; Zimmerman et al., 2008. |
| Fact No. 4: | REM sleep currently involves the distinctive neural activation of regions responsible for alertness, attention, and emotional processing (e.g., cingulate cortex, amygdala, hippocampal formation, striatum, and thalamus). In other words, REM sleep is a state of heightened alertness, attention, and emotional responsiveness. | Braun et al., 1997; Caska et al., 2009; Goldstein and Walker, 2014; Peterson et al., 2002; Maquet et al., 1996; Maquet, 2000. |
| Fact No. 5: | Animals show greater alertness after waking up from REM sleep than after waking up from N-REM sleep. This allows a state of high readiness to defend itself from danger. | Kandel et al., 2013, p. 1157; Lima et al., 2005; Horner et al., 1997b; Reite et al., 1965; Snyder, 1966; Ribeiro, 2021; Tseng et al., 2022. |
| Fact No. 6: | REM sleep has specific characteristics that allow the animal to awaken quickly after detecting stimuli associated with predators (e.g., rapid and specific reactivity to predatory stimuli, rapid increase in pupil size, and rapid increase in the ability to move when detecting a predatory stimulus). Which ensures a successful defense against any events capable of threatening the animal's life. | Tseng et al., 2022. |
| Fact No. 7: | An organism's chances of survival depend on the presence of certain attributes that favor its survival. Thus, not all have the same chances (or probability) of survival. | Dawkins, 2015a, pp. 2-3, 6; Mayr, 2001, pp. 188-189; Mayr, 2009, p. 148. |
| Inference No. 1: | The attribute of momentarily increasing alertness, attention, and emotional responsiveness during sleep can contribute to the organism’s survival. | Inference 1 is a logical consequence of facts 1 to 5. |
| Fact No. 8: | During REM sleep, brain metabolism increases by approximately 20% due to the heightened intensity of neural activity. | Bear et al., 2016, p. 660; Peever and Fuller, 2017. |
| Fact No. 9: | Neuronal activity consumes much more energy than neuronal silencing. | Kandel et al., 2013, p. 1157; Lennie, 2003. |
| Fact No. 10: | Non-random elimination is prolific in removing waste. Nothing so costly lasts for several million years unless it serves an important function. | McFadden, 2022, p. 268; Meredith et al., 2011. |
| Fact No. 11: | REM sleep has existed for several million years. Numerous lines of evidence indicate the possibility that REM sleep originated early in animal evolution, approximately 450 million years ago, that is, long before the branch of amniotes. | Brown et al., 2006; Frank et al., 2012; Jaggard et al., 2021; Kanaya et al., 2020; Leung et al., 2019; Medeiros et al., 2021; Meisel et al., 2011; Nath et al., 2017; Ramón et al., 2004; Tainton-Heap et al., 2021; van Alphen et al., 2013. |
| Inference No. 2: | The high energy expenditure of REM sleep and its persistence over millions of years imply that it plays an important role in the survival of organisms that possess it. In other words, REM sleep requires a strong evolutionary justification. | Inference 2 is a logical consequence of facts 8 to 11. |
| Inference No. 3: | The primary function of REM sleep is to compensate for the high vulnerability of N-REM sleep. REM sleep is an important biological mechanism that helps increase the organism's chances of survival—a strong evolutionary justification. | Inference 3 is a logical consequence of facts 1 to 11 and inferences 1 and 2. |
| Inference No. 4: | If (for some reason) the organism is more vulnerable and REM sleep parameters do not adapt to compensate for this vulnerability, the protective function of REM sleep will be less efficient, risking its survival. | Inference 4 is a logical consequence of inference 3. |
| Inference No. 5: | If (for some reason) the organism is more protected and REM sleep parameters do not adapt to save energy, the protective function of REM sleep will be energetically inefficient. It will spend resources that could be invested in survival, such as collecting food and seeking shelter. | Inference 5 is a logical consequence of inference 3 and facts 8 and 9. |
| Inference No. 6: | REM sleep parameters (duration, latency, and density) should depend on any factors that affect the organism's protection or vulnerability. They must adapt to conserve energy (when the organism is already protected due to another factor besides REM sleep) or to invest more energy to intensify the protective function (when the organism is vulnerable). | Inference 6 is a logical consequence of inferences 3, 4, and 5 and fact 10. |
| General hypotheses | Specific hypotheses | Status● | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| REM sleep is highly adaptive. | Hypothesis 1: organisms that have REM sleep during bihemispheric N-REM sleep have a better chance of surviving than those that do not have it. | Logically confirmed.* | Tseng et al., 2022. (And this Article itself.) |
| Hypothesis 2: REM sleep is a necessary adaptation for organisms that sleep with both cerebral hemispheres. | Factually and logically confirmed. | Frank et al., 2012; Jaggard et al., 2021; Leung et al., 2019; Medeiros et al., 2021; Tainton-Heap et al., 2021; van Alphen et al., 2013. (And this Article itself.) | |
| Hypothesis 3: given the high vulnerability of deep sleep (or quiet sleep), there was a strong evolutionary pressure for animals to develop vigilant sleep (or active sleep). | Factually and logically confirmed. | Frank et al., 2012; Jaggard et al., 2021; Leung et al., 2019; Medeiros et al., 2021; Tainton-Heap et al., 2021; van Alphen et al., 2013. (And this Article itself.) | |
| Hypothesis 4: predation played a significant role in the evolution of REM sleep. | Factually and logically confirmed. | Capellini et al., 2008; Tseng et al., 2022. (And this Article itself.) | |
| REM sleep is cyclical due to its protective function. | Hypothesis 5: the presence of more than one REM episode offers more efficient protection, increasing the organism's chances of survival. | Logically confirmed.* | This Article itself. (See the arguments I developed in Section 4.2.) |
| The primary biological function of REM sleep is to reduce the vulnerability caused by N-REM sleep. | Hypothesis 6: REM sleep activates neural regions involved in threat detection. | Factually confirmed. | Bear et al., 2016, p. 670; Corsi-Cabrera et al., 2016; Damasio, 2003, p. 58; Dang-Vu et al., 2010; Davis and Whalen, 2001; Deboer et al., 1998; Eagleman and Vaughn, 2021; Gazzaniga et al., 2016, p. 95; Maquet et al., 1996; Nofzinger et al., 1997; Pignatelli and Beyeler, 2019; Rolls, 2019; Snyder, 1966; Sah et al., 2003; Whalen et al., 2013. |
| Hypothesis 7: REM sleep activates neural regions involved in emotional processing. | Factually confirmed. | Bear et al., 2016, p. 670; Corsi-Cabrera et al., 2016; Damasio, 2003, p. 58; Dang-Vu et al., 2010; Gazzaniga et al., 2016, p. 95; Jumah and Dossani, 2022; Maquet et al., 1996; Nofzinger et al., 1997; Pignatelli and Beyeler, 2019; Rolls, 2019; Snyder, 1966; Sah et al., 2003; Whalen et al., 2013. | |
| Hypothesis 8: REM sleep activates neural regions involved in attention. | Factually confirmed. | Bear et al., 2016, p. 670; Corsi-Cabrera et al., 2016; Damasio, 2003, p. 58; Dang-Vu et al., 2010; Davis and Whalen, 2001; Deboer et al., 1998; Eagleman and Vaughn, 2021; Gazzaniga et al., 2016, p. 95; Jumah and Dossani, 2022; Maquet et al., 1996; Nofzinger et al., 1997; Pignatelli and Beyeler, 2019; Rolls, 2019; Snyder, 1966. | |
| Hypothesis 9: REM sleep activates neural regions involved in pain processing. | Factually confirmed. | Devinsky et al., 1995; Kandel et al., 2013, p. 545; Maquet et al., 1996; Paus et al., 1997; Schneider et al., 2020; Wu et al., 2017; Xiao and Zhang, 2018; Xiao et al., 2021. | |
| Hypothesis 10: REM sleep is necessary when N-REM sleep occurs in both hemispheres. | Factually confirmed. | Fuchs et al., 2009; Lyamin et al., 2018; Mascetti, 2016; Rattenborg et al., 1999a; Rattenborg et al., 1999b; Rattenborg, 2006; Rattenborg et al., 2016. | |
| Hypothesis 11: REM sleep is dispensable when N-REM sleep occurs only in one hemisphere. (Dispensable in the sense that the organism already has sufficient protection provided by an active hemisphere. “Dispensable” does not mean that it cannot appear (with some duration) in some species. Non-random elimination may not have had time to remove REM sleep in organisms in which it makes no sense.) | Factually confirmed. | Fuchs et al., 2009; Lyamin et al., 2008; Lyamin et al., 2018; Mascetti, 2016; Mukhametov, 1995; Mukhametov et al., 1977; Mukhametov et al., 1988; Rattenborg et al., 1999a; Rattenborg et al., 1999b; Rattenborg, 2006; Rattenborg et al., 2016. | |
| Hypothesis 12: in organisms that only have unihemispheric sleep, REM sleep is useless. Either it does not exist or there are some remnants due to the evolutionary past. | Factually confirmed. | Lyamin et al., 2008; Lyamin et al., 2018; Mukhametov, 1995; Mukhametov et al., 1977; Mukhametov et al., 1988; Shurley et al., 1969. | |
| Hypothesis 13: in organisms that possess both bihemispheric and unihemispheric sleep, suppression of REM sleep during unihemispheric sleep will generally not accompany REM sleep rebound. | Factually confirmed. | Lyamin et al., 2018. | |
| Hypothesis 14: in organisms that possess both bihemispheric and unihemispheric sleep, suppression of REM sleep during unihemispheric sleep can rarely cause a small rebound of REM sleep. | Factually confirmed. | Lyamin et al., 2018. | |
| Hypothesis 15: upon awakening from REM sleep, the body presents full alertness and sensory and motor efficiency. | Factually confirmed. | Kandel et al., 2013, p. 1157; Lima et al., 2005; Horner et al., 1997b; Reite et al., 1965; Snyder, 1966; Ribeiro, 2021; Tseng et al., 2022. | |
| Hypothesis 16: REM sleep makes waking up easier. | Factually confirmed. | Ermann et al., 1993; Ficca et al., 2004; Klemm, 2011; Ribeiro, 2021; Tseng et al., 2022. | |
| Hypothesis 17: spontaneous awakenings occur more frequently during, or shortly after, REM sleep. | Factually confirmed. | Ermann et al., 1993; Ficca et al., 2004; Klemm, 2011; Ribeiro, 2021; Tseng et al., 2022. | |
| Hypothesis 18: REM sleep does not suffer a “negative rebound”. Sleeping more one night increases REM sleep time, but does not reduce REM sleep time in the subsequent night. | Factually confirmed. | Le Bon, 2020; Ribeiro, 2021. | |
| Hypothesis 19: REM sleep suppression does not compromise any neural function other than protective function. | Factually confirmed. | Bear et al., 2016, p. 665; Feriante and Araujo, 2023; Kandel et al., 2013, p. 1157; Matsuda et al., 2021; McCarthy et al., 2016; Nollet et al., 2019; Pagel and Parnes, 2001; Ribeiro, 2021. | |
| The parameters of REM sleep depend on the organism’s vulnerability. | Hypothesis 20: The parameters of REM sleep—its duration, latency to the first episode, and density—depend on information provided by all varieties of neural maps: interoceptive, proprioceptive, and exteroceptive. | Factually confirmed. | Anderson and Bradley, 2013; Baglioni et al., 2016; Berger and Riemann, 1993; Borniger et al., 2018; Chamorro et al., 2014; Driver et al., 1994; Driver and Taylor, 2000; Elrokhsi et al., 2020; Fang et al., 1995; Gutwein and Fishbein, 1980a; Gutwein and Fishbein, 1980b; Hague et al., 2003; Hrozanova et al., 2020; Imeri and Opp, 2009; Kishi et al., 2023; Kitamura et al., 2021; Kiyono et al., 1981; Krueger and Majde, 1994; Liu et al., 2008; McCarley, 1982; Mirmiran et al., 1982; Myllymäki et al., 2011; Nair et al., 2022; Palagini et al., 2013; Pollmächer et al., 1993; Riemann et al., 2020; Riemann and Berger, 1989; Schmid et al., 2008; Seol et al., 2022; Smith, 1996; Steiger and Pawlowski, 2019; Steiger et al., 2013; Tagney, 1973; Theorell-Haglöw et al., 2010; Toth and Krueger, 1988; van Gool and Mirmiran, 1986; Wichniak et al., 2017; Zapalac et al., 2024. |
| Hypothesis 21: total REM sleep time is shorter in organisms with higher body fat. | Factually confirmed. | Chamorro et al., 2014; Elrokhsi et al., 2020; Liu et al., 2008; Theorell-Haglöw et al., 2010. | |
| Hypothesis 22: the latency to the first REM episode is greater in organisms with greater body fat. | Factually confirmed. | Chamorro et al., 2014; Liu et al., 2008. | |
| Hypothesis 23: the density (or intensity) of REM sleep is lower in organisms with greater body fat. | Factually confirmed. | Liu et al., 2008. | |
| Hypothesis 24: non-obese sedentary individuals have more REM sleep time compared to more active individuals. | Factually confirmed. | Hague et al., 2003; Seol et al., 2022; Zapalac et al., 2024. | |
| Hypothesis 25: non-obese sedentary individuals have a shorter latency to the first REM episode compared to more active individuals. | Factually confirmed. | Hague et al., 2003; Seol et al., 2022; Zapalac et al., 2024. | |
| Hypothesis 26: non-obese sedentary individuals have greater REM sleep density compared to more active individuals. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| Hypothesis 27: total REM sleep time is shorter in organisms with greater muscle strength or in those who exercised recently. | Factually confirmed. | Brand et al., 2010; Driver et al., 1994; Driver and Taylor, 2000; Hague et al., 2003; Hrozanova et al., 2020; Kubitz et al., 1996; Myllymäki et al., 2011; Seol et al., 2022; Youngstedt et al., 1997; Zapalac et al., 2024. | |
| Hypothesis 28: the latency to the first REM episode is greater in organisms with greater muscular strength or in those who exercised recently. | Factually confirmed. | Driver et al., 1994; Driver and Taylor, 2000; Hague et al., 2003; Seol et al., 2022; Youngstedt et al., 1997; Zapalac et al., 2024. | |
| Hypothesis 29: REM sleep density is lower in organisms with greater muscular strength or in those who exercised recently. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| Hypothesis 30: recent exposure to a new environment (or new stimuli) increases REM sleep time. | Factually confirmed. | Borniger et al., 2018; Gutwein and Fishbein, 1980a; Gutwein and Fishbein, 1980b; Kiyono et al., 1981; Mirmiran et al., 1982; Nair et al., 2022; Smith, 1996; Tagney, 1973; van Gool and Mirmiran, 1986. | |
| Hypothesis 31: recent exposure to a new environment (or new stimuli) reduces the latency to the first REM episode. | Factually confirmed. | Mirmiran et al., 1982; Nair et al., 2022. | |
| Hypothesis 32: recent exposure to a new environment (or new stimuli) increases REM sleep density. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| Hypothesis 33: depression increases REM sleep time. | Factually confirmed. | Anderson and Bradley, 2013; Baglioni et al., 2016; Berger and Riemann, 1993; Cheeta et al., 1997; Palagini et al., 2013; Steiger and Pawlowski, 2019; Steiger et al., 2013; Vogel et al., 1990; Wichniak et al., 2017. | |
| Hypothesis 34: depression reduces the latency to the first REM episode. | Factually confirmed. | Anderson and Bradley, 2013; Baglioni et al., 2016; Berger and Riemann, 1993; Cheeta et al., 1997; Lam, 2006; McCarley, 1982; Palagini et al., 2013; Riemann and Berger, 1989; Steiger and Pawlowski, 2019; Steiger et al., 2013; Vogel et al., 1990; Wichniak et al., 2017. | |
| Hypothesis 35: depression increases REM sleep density. | Factually confirmed. | Anderson and Bradley, 2013; Baglioni et al., 2016; Berger and Riemann, 1993; Friess et al., 2004; Kishi et al., 2023; Lam, 2006; McCarley, 1982; Palagini et al., 2013; Steiger and Pawlowski, 2019; Steiger et al., 2013; Wichniak et al., 2017. | |
| Hypothesis 36: stress reduces REM sleep time or suppress it. | Factually confirmed. | Feng et al., 2023; Friess et al., 2004; Hrozanova et al., 2020; Papale et al., 2005; Schmid et al., 2008. | |
| Hypothesis 37: stress increases the latency to the first REM episode. | Factually confirmed. | Feng et al., 2023; Friess et al., 2004; Goldberg et al., 2020; Goodenough et al., 1975. | |
| Hypothesis 38: stress increases REM sleep density. | Factually confirmed. | Barbato et al., 1994; Barbato, 2023; Feinberg et al., 1987; Feng et al., 2023; Ficca et al., 2004; Goodenough et al., 1975; Lauer et al., 1987; Rodenbeck and Hajak, 2001. | |
| Hypothesis 39: when other factors remain unchanged, combined vulnerabilities produce more intense effects on REM sleep parameters. | Factually and logically confirmed. | Anderson and Bradley, 2013; Arias et al., 2020; Berger and Riemann, 1993; Kishi et al., 2023; McCarley, 1982; Palagini et al., 2013; Ribeiro, 2021; Riemann et al., 2020; Riemann and Berger, 1989; Schmid et al., 2008; Stahl, 2002; Steiger and Pawlowski, 2019; Steiger et al., 2013; Suchecki et al., 2012; Targum and Fava, 2011; Wichniak et al., 2017; Wolpert, 2008. (And this Article itself.) | |
| Hypothesis 40: when other factors remain unchanged, combined protections produce more intense effects on REM sleep parameters. | Factually and logically confirmed. | Chand et al., 2021; Feinberg et al., 1987; Oken et al., 2006. (And this Article itself.) | |
| Hypothesis 41: REM sleep density is a measure of the organism's level of alertness. Which is directly related to the amount of stress, because stress reduces the organism's vulnerability by increasing vigilance. | Factually and logically confirmed. | Barbato et al., 1994; Barbato, 2023; Chand et al., 2021; Feinberg et al., 1987; Lam, 2006; Oken et al., 2006. (And this Article itself.) | |
| Hypothesis 42: bodily immature neonates have more REM sleep compared to bodily mature neonates. | Factually confirmed. | Balzamo et al., 1972; Blumberg, 2015; Chen et al., 2022; Cui et al., 2019; Grigg-Damberger and Wolfe, 2017; Jouvet-Mounier et al., 1970; Reite et al., 1976; Ruckebusch et al., 1977; Szeto and Hinman, 1985; Thurber et al., 2008. | |
| Hypothesis 43: bodily immature neonates have a shorter latency to the first REM episode compared to bodily mature neonates. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| Hypothesis 44: bodily immature neonates have greater REM sleep density compared to bodily mature neonates. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| Hypothesis 45: in premature births, REM sleep is even more abundant than in newborns. | Factually confirmed. | Chen et al., 2022; Graven and Browne, 2008; Mizrahi, 2004; Okawa et al., 2017; Werth et al., 2017. | |
| Hypothesis 46: in premature births, the latency to the first REM episode is even shorter than in neonates. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| Hypothesis 47: in premature births, REM sleep density is even greater than in newborns. | Not confirmed nor refuted.✤ | ||
| REM sleep evolved from a brief awakening from N-REM sleep. | Hypothesis 48: REM sleep emerged as an error in the neurobiological mechanisms that control the transition from sleep to wakefulness, causing a brief awakening from N-REM sleep. | Logically plausible.✣ | This Article itself. (See the arguments I developed in Section 4.5.) |
| Hypothesis 49: primeval REM sleep evolved from a brief awakening to an ease of awakening. | Logically plausible.✣ | This Article itself. (See the arguments I developed in Section 4.5.) |
|
| Hypothesis 50: after evolving into an ease of awakening, primeval REM sleep began to include more than one REM episode. | Logically plausible.✣ | This Article itself. (See the arguments I developed in Section 4.5.) |
|
| Hypothesis 51: intense muscle atonia appeared after primeval REM sleep began to include more than one REM episode. | Logically plausible.✣ | This Article itself. (See the arguments I developed in Section 4.5.) |
4.1. REM Sleep Is Highly Adaptive
4.2. REM Sleep Is Cyclical Due to Its Protective Function
4.3. The primary Biological Function of REM Sleep Is to Reduce the Vulnerability Caused by N-REM Sleep
4.4. The Parameters of REM Sleep Depend on the organism’s VULnerability
4.5. REM Sleep Evolved from a Brief Awakening from N-REM Sleep
5. Attempts at refutation
6. A Significant and Detrimental Consensus
7. How to Assess the Adequacy of a Scientific Theory?
8. Limitations
9. Conclusion
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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