What is deep sleep and how much do we need of it?

I started self-measuring with the Jawbone Up 10 days ago. The amount of deep sleep I was getting immediately caught my eye. Here’s the data from one of the first nights:

Jawbone_UP

Straight away I noticed that deep sleep was just 30% of my overall sleep.

It seemed too little to me and while this was my worst night, my deep sleep never climbed above 38%.

So I started wondering: How much deep sleep should I get? What exactly is it? What does it do for me?

 

Searching for answers

Finding the answers was surprisingly difficult. The major obstacle was to understand how the Jawbone UP defines deep sleep in the first place.

Here’s the problem:

The Jawbone Up (like Sleep Cycle and similar apps) measures our movements and divides them into two phases:

  1. Light sleep: when you move more
  2. Deep sleep: when you move less

But this is different from the scientific definition with four (sometimes five) phases.

Let’s see how they compare:

Phase 1

You slowly settle in to sleep.

  • Your muscles relax.
  • You have light dreams.
  • Typical ratio of overall sleep: 5%

And the Jawbone UP?
You move quite a bit: it registers this as light sleep.

Phase 2:

The second phase of light sleep.

  • Your breathing and heart rate slow down.
  • Your body temperature drops a little but your body remains relatively active.
  • Typical ratio of overall sleep: a whopping 50%.

And the Jawbone Up?
You still move markedly during this phase: the Jawbone registers these movements as light sleep.

Phase 3:

This is the ‘official’ deep sleep-phase.

  • Your heart and breathing slow further.
  • Your muscles relax and your body hardly moves.
  • Your brain is much less active now: you don’t dream.

And the Jawbone UP?
We hardly move during this phase so the Jawbone UP measures it for what it is: deep sleep.

What happens during deep sleep?

During deep sleep, all energy goes into recharging your batteries: Your kidneys clean your blood, your organs detoxicate, cells are replaced, wounds heal, muscle tissue builds up. Moreover, you consolidate your memories.

Get too little deep sleep and your immune system weakens. Over the long run you may suffer fatigue, apathy and even depression.

Sounds like I want to get enough of that. But how much should it be?

Here’s a surprise: a healthy dose of deep sleep is about 20% of overall sleep. That’s less than I thought.

If this is the case, then even my worst night with 30% would be way above the norm. If we only had three phases, I needn’t worry. But there’s a fourth phase and this is where things get interesting:

Phase 4 (REM sleep)

In REM-sleep the brain gets active again. It’s as active as during the day: we dream intensively during this phase.

It’s not exactly known what REM-sleep does for us but it seems to play a key role in storing memories and balancing our moods – nothing I’d want to tinker with. And 25% of overall sleep is the healthy norm.

But where does it count? Does the Jawbone Up register REM as deep or light sleep?

REM is a paradoxical phase. The name stands for Rapid Eye Movement: our brain is active and our eyes are too. But our limbs are not. We secrete hormones that effectively put us in a narcotic state: like in deep sleep, our body lies still!

And this can only mean one thing:

The Jawbone UP registers REM-sleep as deep sleep. It cannot keep the two apart: it doesn’t look into your eyes and it doesn’t measure your brain activity (you’d need an EEG for that).

So there we go: deep sleep on the Jawbone is both REM- and the real deep sleep.

Let’s look at the ideal ratios again:

  • Deep Sleep 20% + REM sleep 25% =  45%.

It’s a bit of a shocker. With 30% in the worst and 38% in the best night, I’m quite a way off. But I have my target now: I want to up my deep sleep to 45% in the next 10 days.

Will I manage? I’ll report about it here.

How much deep sleep are you getting?

Content writer at Addapp. I write about exercise and productivity. I'm obsessed about tennis. Off the court, I also help people rediscover their love for writing.

17 comments… add one

  • Very interesting stuff. I, too, have just begun using the Up Jawbone. I snore like crazy, and have some degree of apnea, but do NOT want to wear a Cpap machine. I am just beginning to understand the whole sleep cycle thing…your explanation is terrific. I’m going to look into my % of deep/REM sleep.

    Reply
    • It wasn’t easy to figure out the difference between REM and Deep Sleep and I am really glad that you find this helpful Holly. Should you feel like it, let us know if and when the Jawbone Up is helping you with your sleep! It could be interesting to share that with other users.

      Reply
  • You can get “deep sleep” to >90% quite easily: Just sleep no more than 3-4h each night for a few days :-)

    Reply
    • Hi Eric,
      have you actually tried this?
      For a moment, I was tempted to include this in my little experiment!

      Reply
      • It appears to be well established that lack of deep sleep makes you to skip right to deep sleep instead of going through the lighter sleep phases first (read e.g. “The Promise of Sleep” by William C. Dement).

        I haven’t been able to untangle the relationships around my sleep, there’s just too many variables, and not enough data! But if I do figure out something, I’ll post the results on http://blog.zenobase.com/ :-)

        Reply
  • Thanks Eric. I’ve been sleeping 4-5 hours lately and it doesn’t work that way :-). I’ll report my findings from Jawbone as well soon…! Thanks for sharing btw

    Reply
  • If you really want to track your sleep patterns there are new products (masks) coming out this year that will be great at tracking almost everything (eye movements, EEG, and other stuff). Not as comfortable as wearing a wrist band but much more precise. Here’s an article about some that are coming out: http://dreamstudies.org/2014/02/05/lucid-dream-masks-wearable-tech-devices/

    Reply
  • Hi Jonas,
    I hadn’t heard of these.
    Having a device that accurately measures the different phases of sleep would just be great: I hope they hit the market soon!

    Reply
    • hopefully affordable

      Reply
  • I can not thank you enough for writing this! I also have an up and have been searching for this information.

    Reply
    • Thanks for mentioning it Candy.
      It’s good to know that the article is helpful.
      Carsten

      Reply
  • Very helpful information. I just started using the UP 24. This morning I put in power nap mode as wanted a little more sleep; spent 1 hr of 1 hr 15 minutes in deep sleep. Guess I needed it.

    Reply
    • Yes Sharon,
      I’ve repeatedly made this experience now too: I’ll fall into deep sleep really fast when I lack it.

      Reply
  • I am a 79 year old male and averaging 4h 32m for a week of sound sleep on my Jawbone. But seem to dream. I thought walking to build up my steps was making the sound sleep figure good but how much Rem sleep would one expect in the Sound sleep figure?

    Reply
  • Hi John,
    deep sleep (the scientific version) is normally about 20% of overall sleep while REM is about 25% of overall sleep.
    This would mean that REM makes (just) over half of ‘sound sleep’ on the Jawbone.
    By the way, the ratio of REM-sleep gets bigger towards the morning. Also, REM sleep seems to get less with age: http://sleepfoundation.org/sleep-topics/aging-and-sleep

    Reply
  • Folks, please do not listen to this author. He is not a medical professional, his numbers are off, and the Jawbone device is *not* capable of tracking the different stages of sleep. See this article on Huff-Post.com (written by an doctor who specializes in sleep research) for the results of a head-to-head comparison of the different sleep-tracking devices. The article shows that the Jawbone device cannot accurately track the stages of sleep:
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dr-christopher-winter/sleep-tips_b_4792760.html
    The Jawbone claims to be able to differentiate between the sleep stages, but it performed terribly in a head-to-head test against other devices. You’re better off going with the “Basis Chrome”, for $199. This device measures pulse, temperature, and perspiration, and according to the article, performed fabulously compared to other devices that use only an accelerometer.

    Reply
  • I got my Up24 to help monitor my health and sleep. I’ve noticed that I sleep less than I thought each night. My doctor suggested a sleep study but thanks to this info I’m going to see if I can get more hours of sleep, track type of sleep and feel better when I wake. Thanks

    Reply

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