Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Cognitive Science

Twitching in your sleep is more about mapping the brain than chasing rabbits

by The Conversation
October 5, 2014
in Cognitive Science
Photo credit: Tony Alter (Creative Commons)

Photo credit: Tony Alter (Creative Commons)

Share on TwitterShare on Facebook

By Mark Blumberg, University of Iowa; Alexandre Tiriac, University of Iowa, and Carlos Del Rio-Bermudez, University of Iowa

In recent years scientists have discovered the many ways that the brain is activated during sleep. But we’re also beginning to see ways in which the body is activated during sleep, especially during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and especially when we are young.

Twitching – the thousands of jerky movements that baby mammals, including humans, dogs, cats, and rats, make each day – is one such behaviour. Twitching happens in the arms and legs, fingers and toes, whiskers and tail, and even the eyes (the rapid eye movements that give REM sleep its name). For millennia, humans have thought of twitches as by-products of dreams, an idea encapsulated by the notion that your dog is simply “chasing rabbits” in his sleep. Adults twitch too, of course, but they do so at a much lower rate than do babies.

But what if twitching has a function that goes beyond dreams. In research carried out on infant rats – at ages when they sleep and twitch a lot – we found that the brain processes sensory feedback from twitches and wake movements very differently.

Learning about our limbs

Our work, published in Current Biology, gives new support for the idea that twitching contributes to the process through which we learn about our limbs and how to control them. They may even help us understand if and how twitching affects our sensory and motor systems across the lifespan as our bodies grow, as we gain and lose weight, and as we recover from disease or injury.

Over the last decade, scientists have made great strides in understanding how the brain responds to sensory information flowing back from twitching limbs. Whereas it was once assumed that the brain blocks this sensory feedback, it is now known that the hundreds of thousands of twitches produced each day by a sleeping rat pup trigger similar quantities of brain activity.

Our hypothesis is that twitches are the brain’s way of exploring its body, much like the way sonar is used by submariners: one ping here, one ping there, with the feedback from those pings used to map the outside world. So, too, may twitches help the infant brain to map the body.

Strange phenomenon

All well and good, but we kept confronting a very strange phenomenon that we were unable to explain: whereas twitches reliably triggered a lot of brain activity, similar (or even larger) limb movements while awake didn’t. This seemed paradoxical because we generally associate waking with more brain activity than sleep, not less.

Google News Preferences Add PsyPost to your preferred sources

To explain how we resolved this paradox, it is important to understand that all animals, including humans, constantly monitor self-produced movements while awake. In addition to the motor commands that produce limb movements, our brain sends secondary signals that are copies of these motor commands to other parts of the brain so that it can keep track of the information flowing back from the moving limbs.

Simply put, when we produce a limb movement, as when we wave our hand in the air, we expect the sensations that return from the moving limb. In contrast, when someone else moves our hand for us, we don’t expect the resulting sensations. These two kinds of movement – the first self-produced and the second other-produced – feel very different and lie at the heart of what it means to be an autonomous individual.

So, we wondered, what if the sensory feedback from twitching limbs was processed as if no motor copy in the brain was produced? Based on what we know from research with crickets, electric fish and monkeys, we surmised that a lack of the secondary motor copies made by the brain during twitching would allow sensory feedback to activate the brain. And because motor copies would accompany wake movements, we surmised that the system would filter out the sensory feedback from moving limbs.

To really test this idea, we had to devise ways to manipulate the expectations of the rat pups as they moved their limbs. The results were clear: when we tricked the pups into moving their limbs in violation of their expectations, the movements triggered a lot of brain activity – just as we saw with twitches. And when the movements were produced in a way that did not violate the pups’ expectations, very little brain activity resulted – just as we saw with wake movements.

These results help us make sense of how twitches contribute to development. That is, by treating twitches differently from wake movements, the sensations from twitching limbs are not filtered out. Instead, twitches lead directly to brain activity, which is necessary for brain plasticity, that is the brain’s ability to change.

If our findings had turned out differently, it would have been very difficult to believe that twitches played any functional role for the developing brain.

We still have much to learn about the specifics of how twitches contribute to brain development, maintenance, and repair. We also have much to learn about twitching in humans and how it changes across the lifespan. But we do now know that twitches are not simply pale reflections of wake movements. They are something completely different.

The Conversation

The authors do not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article. They also have no relevant affiliations.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Previous Post

People prone to delusions make rushed decisions, research shows

Next Post

Combat trauma is nothing like in classical antiquity – so why are we still treating it as such?

RELATED

ChatGPT acts as a “cognitive crutch” that weakens memory, new research suggests
Artificial Intelligence

ChatGPT acts as a “cognitive crutch” that weakens memory, new research suggests

March 30, 2026
Verbal IQ predicts political participation and liberal attitudes twice as strongly as performance IQ
Cognitive Science

Trying harder on an intelligence test does not actually improve your score

March 27, 2026
Brain rot and the crisis of deep thought in the age of social media
Cognitive Science

Massive analysis of longitudinal data links social media to poorer youth mental health

March 27, 2026
High meat consumption may protect against cognitive decline in people with a specific Alzheimer’s gene
Cognitive Science

Asking complex questions improves creative project scores but hurts multiple-choice exam grades

March 26, 2026
Chronic medical conditions predict childhood depression more strongly than social or family hardships
Cognitive Science

What brain waves reveal about people who can solve a Rubik’s Cube in seconds

March 24, 2026
Shifting genetic tides: How early language skills forecast ADHD and literacy outcomes
Cognitive Science

The biological roots behind the chills you get from music and art

March 22, 2026
Machiavellianism most pronounced in students of politics and law, least pronounced in students of social work, nursing and education
Cognitive Science

Intelligence predicts progressive views, but only after college

March 21, 2026
Genetic factors likely confound the link between c-sections and offspring mental health
Cognitive Science

Neuroscientists just upended our understanding of Pavlovian learning

March 21, 2026

STAY CONNECTED

RSS Psychology of Selling

  • When a goal-driven boss ignores relationships, manipulative employees may fight back
  • When salespeople fail to hit their targets, inner drive matters more than bonus checks
  • The “dark” personality traits that predict sales success — and when they backfire
  • What communication skills do B2B salespeople actually need in a digital-first era?
  • A founder’s smile may be worth millions in startup funding, research suggests

LATEST

Brief mindfulness practice accelerates visual processing speeds in adults

Belief in the harmfulness of speech is linked to both progressive ideology and symptoms of depression

Better parent-child communication is linked to stronger soft skills and emotional stability in teens

Men who favor the tradwife lifestyle often view the women in it with derision

A diet based on ultra-processed foods impairs metabolic and reproductive health, study finds

Psychologists identify nine core habits associated with healthy non-monogamous partnerships

Childhood trauma linked to elevated risk of simultaneous physical and mental illness in old age

Short-acting psychedelic DMT shows promise as a rapid treatment for major depressive disorder

PsyPost is a psychology and neuroscience news website dedicated to reporting the latest research on human behavior, cognition, and society. (READ MORE...)

  • Mental Health
  • Neuroimaging
  • Personality Psychology
  • Social Psychology
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and conditions
  • Do not sell my personal information

(c) PsyPost Media Inc

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy

(c) PsyPost Media Inc