
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Some people fall asleep almost as soon as their head touches the pillow, while for others it can take hours of tossing and turning. CrowdScience listener Assia needs at least 45 minutes to get to sleep: it's always taken her a long time to drift off no matter how tired she is, and nothing seems to make a difference. She asked us to investigate.
Presenter Caroline Steel turns to experts to find out what happens in our bodies when we fall asleep, and why it’s more difficult for some than others. Eus van Someren explains how our bodies know when it’s time to get some rest and what can influence the difficulty of getting to sleep from our earliest years. Morten Kringelbach reveals that there may be more stages of sleep than we thought, and Ada Eban-Rothschild tells us why we have something to learn from the birds and the bees about getting a good night’s rest.
Caroline has trouble getting to sleep herself, and volunteers to have her sleep monitored in Cardiff University’s sleep lab. And we share some expert tips on falling asleep more easily.
Presenter: Caroline Steel
With thanks to Professor Milton Mermikides for permission to include his composition ‘Transitions’.
(Photo: Caroline Steel takes a nap in Cardiff University’s sleep lab)
By BBC World Service4.7
436436 ratings
Some people fall asleep almost as soon as their head touches the pillow, while for others it can take hours of tossing and turning. CrowdScience listener Assia needs at least 45 minutes to get to sleep: it's always taken her a long time to drift off no matter how tired she is, and nothing seems to make a difference. She asked us to investigate.
Presenter Caroline Steel turns to experts to find out what happens in our bodies when we fall asleep, and why it’s more difficult for some than others. Eus van Someren explains how our bodies know when it’s time to get some rest and what can influence the difficulty of getting to sleep from our earliest years. Morten Kringelbach reveals that there may be more stages of sleep than we thought, and Ada Eban-Rothschild tells us why we have something to learn from the birds and the bees about getting a good night’s rest.
Caroline has trouble getting to sleep herself, and volunteers to have her sleep monitored in Cardiff University’s sleep lab. And we share some expert tips on falling asleep more easily.
Presenter: Caroline Steel
With thanks to Professor Milton Mermikides for permission to include his composition ‘Transitions’.
(Photo: Caroline Steel takes a nap in Cardiff University’s sleep lab)

856 Listeners

1,968 Listeners

604 Listeners

93 Listeners

350 Listeners

960 Listeners

410 Listeners

429 Listeners

765 Listeners

743 Listeners

228 Listeners

331 Listeners

363 Listeners

242 Listeners

114 Listeners

0 Listeners

1 Listeners

0 Listeners

6 Listeners

13 Listeners

4 Listeners

1 Listeners

36 Listeners

0 Listeners

3 Listeners