The Press

Insomnia aided our ancestors, study says

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UNITED STATES: Age-related insomnia may be a throwback to a time when live-in grandparen­ts helped our ancestors stay safe at night, US researcher­s say.

Varying sleep patterns among people of different ages evolved to protect us against dangers lurking in the night, they say.

For our ancestors who lived and slept in groups thousands of years ago, it paid to ensure not everyone was deeply asleep. It could be one reason why people tend to experience more restless nights as they get older.

Dr David Samson, a researcher at Duke University in North Carolina, said: ‘‘The idea that there’s a benefit to living with grandparen­ts has been around for a while, but this study extends that idea to vigilance during night-time sleep.’’

The scientists, who call their theory the ‘‘poorly sleeping grandparen­t hypothesis’’, carried out a study of the Hadza people, a traditiona­l hunter-gatherer community in Tanzania. During the day, men and women go their separate ways to hunt or forage for tubers and berries in the savannah woodlands. At night, young and old alike sleep together out in the open or in huts.

But not everyone slept at the same time, the researcher­s found. Older group members in their 50s and 60s generally went to bed earlier and woke earlier than those in their 20s and 30s. As a result, it was rare for the whole group to be sleeping at once.

On average, more than onethird of the group was alert or dozing very lightly at any time.

The findings, published in the journal Proceeding­s of the Royal Society B, might help to explain why the Hadza generally do not post night-time sentinels.

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