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View synonyms for REM sleep

REM sleep

noun

, Physiology.
  1. a recurrent period of sleep, typically totaling about two hours a night, during which most dreaming occurs as the eyes move under closed lids and the skeletal muscles are deeply relaxed. Compare slow-wave sleep.


REM sleep

/ rĕm /

  1. Short for rapid eye movement sleep. A period of sleep characterized by rapid periodic twitching movements of the eye muscles and other physiological changes, such as accelerated respiration and heart rate, increased brain activity, and muscle relaxation. REM sleep is associated with activity in the pons of the brainstem; when the pons is eliminated, REM sleep does not occur. REM sleep is the stage of sleep in which most dreaming takes place and is thought to allow for the organization of memories and the retention of learning. REM sleep is the fifth and last stage of sleep that occurs in the sleep cycle, which repeats itself about five times throughout a period of sleep. It is preceded by four stages of non-REM sleep. REM stages become longer with each cycle and account for about 20–25 percent of total sleep in adult humans. In infants, roughly 50 percent of sleep is REM sleep, which is believed to be necessary for the maturation of the central nervous system.
  2. Compare non-REM sleepSee more at sleep


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Word History and Origins

Origin of REM sleep1

First recorded in 1965–70
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Example Sentences

My scores for light, deep, and REM sleep were well within normal, but I still felt sleepy in the morning.

His nightmares ran twice: once just before bed, in clairvoyant preview, and again in the depths of REM sleep.

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