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Sleep & circadian

Sleep pressure / two-process model

DESchlafdruck / Zwei-Prozess-Modell

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The two-process model, proposed by Alexander Borbély in 1982, describes sleep-wake regulation as the interaction of two independent processes: Process S (homeostatic sleep pressure), which accumulates as adenosine and other somnogens build up during waking and dissipates during sleep, and Process C (the circadian signal), generated by the suprachiasmatic nucleus and imposing a roughly 24-hour oscillation in alerting drive that opposes increasing sleep pressure toward evening to maintain sustained wakefulness. Sleep occurs when Process S exceeds the circadian alerting threshold. The model successfully explains phenomena such as the post-lunch dip, rebound deep sleep after sleep deprivation, and the sharp morning wake boundary, and remains the dominant framework for circadian and sleep medicine research.

Sources

  1. Borbély AA. (1982). A two process model of sleep regulation. *Human Neurobiology*doi:10.1007/BF00534816
  2. Borbély AA, Daan S, Wirz-Justice A, Deboer T. (2016). The two-process model of sleep regulation: a reappraisal. *Journal of Sleep Research*doi:10.1111/jsr.12371