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Champion wakers

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I’ll wake mine eyeballs out.

William Shakespeare, Cymbeline (1609–10)

What happens to people if they get no sleep at all for a long time? One of the first scientific experiments on sleep deprivation dates from 1896, when Professor G. T. W. Patrick and his colleague Dr Allen Gilbert of the Iowa University Psychological Laboratory kept three volunteers awake for 90 hours. Patrick and Gilbert charted the now classic signs of prolonged sleep deprivation, including progressive deteriorations in reactions, memory and sensory acuity, together with a decline in body temperature.

Their first experimental subject, an assistant professor at the university, suffered his worst fatigue during the second night. Like Charles Lindbergh, he found that dawn was the cruellest time. He experienced visual hallucinations in which the air seemed full of red, purple and black dancing particles like gnats. All three subjects gained weight during the experiment, but their muscular strength diminished as they became more fatigued. The most noticeable effects were on mental performance: their memory became highly defective and they lost their ability to pay attention. One subject failed to memorise in 20 minutes material that he would normally have committed to memory in two minutes. In all cases, the symptoms disappeared after the experiment.

The first person to become internationally famous for self-imposed sleep deprivation was an American disc jockey called Peter Tripp, whose other claim to fame was inventing the Top 40. In 1959, Tripp managed the feat of staying awake under supervision for more than eight days and nights, a total of 201 hours. He did it to raise money for charity. Tripp even managed to broadcast live during his marathon, from a booth in Times Square, New York.

Peter Tripp suffered. As time went on, his friends and invigilators found it harder and harder to keep him awake. Constant vigilance was required to prevent him from lapsing into microsleeps. Three days into the experiment, Tripp became abusive and unpleasant. After the fifth day he progressively lost his grip on reality and started to experience visual and auditory hallucinations. His dreams broke through into his waking thoughts and he began seeing spiders in his shoes. He became paranoid and thought people were drugging his food. At one point he ran into the street and was nearly knocked down. These disturbing psychological symptoms were accompanied by physical changes, including a continuous decline in body temperature. By the last evening, Tripp’s brain-wave patterns were virtually indistinguishable from those of a sleeping person, even though he was apparently still awake.

After 201 hours of continuous wakefulness Tripp had broken the record and halted the experiment. He immediately fell into a deep sleep that lasted 24 hours. When he finally did awake, his hallucinations had gone and he felt relatively normal. But something seemed to have changed within him. Those close to Peter Tripp felt his personality had altered permanently, and for the worse. His wife left him, Tripp lost his job and he became a drifter. Tripp’s marathon of sleep deprivation certainly did him no good, but it was probably not the sole cause of his subsequent decline and fall. Tripp was taking large doses of Ritalin, an amphetamine-like stimulant drug, to keep himself awake during the marathon, and it is possible that the drug, combined with the sleep deprivation, helped to stimulate his paranoid delusions and hallucinations.

A few years later, Tripp’s record was broken by a 17-year-old high-school student from San Diego called Randy Gardner. In 1965 Gardner stayed awake for 264 hours (or 11 days) in a successful attempt to break into The Guinness Book of Records. Scientists from Stanford University monitored most of his marathon. During the first two days Gardner’s friends helped keep him awake and he did not use caffeine or other stimulants. By the end of the second day he was suffering from blurred vision, making it difficult for him to read or watch TV. By the third day he was irritable and wanted to be left on his own. His speech became slurred and his movements uncoordinated. On the fourth day he experienced memory lapses and mild hallucinations. After nine days without sleep he was unable to complete sentences and had lost the ability to concentrate. On the eleventh and final evening he had double vision.

Despite these temporary but unpleasant symptoms, Randy Gardner suffered remarkably few ill effects. Having stayed awake for 11 days and nights, he went to bed and slept for nearly 15 hours. When he awoke he felt fine. The following night he slept only slightly longer than usual, and within a few days his sleep had returned to normal. He did not go mad and, except for mild hallucinations, he never displayed any psychotic symptoms during the experiment. The experiences of Randy Gardner and others have demonstrated that going without sleep for several days does not generally result in mental illness or other long-term damage.

Some feats of self-imposed sleep deprivation have been endured for purely financial reasons, with not a single scientist in sight. In the depression-era USA of the 1920s and 1930s, a bizarre fad developed for dance marathons, in which people would compete for money. The rules were simple: keep dancing until you drop. This grisly social phenomenon was portrayed in the 1969 film They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? The dance-marathon competitors were supposed not to sleep, although some competitions permitted one dancer to sleep provided their partner held them upright and both kept moving. They must have slept while dancing, since it was not uncommon for these nightmarish marathons to last for weeks. The world record was set by a couple in Chicago, who danced from 29 August 1930 until 1 April 1931 – a total of almost 215 days. The rules allowed them to close their eyes for no more than 15 seconds at a time, so they must have been adept at sleeping with their eyes open. Their reward for this outlandish spectacle of public torture was a paltry $2,000. These dance marathons were eventually made illegal. And talking of torture, let us turn to that uncomfortable subject.

Counting Sheep: The Science and Pleasures of Sleep and Dreams

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