Trifásico

From Polyphasic Sleep Wiki
Revision as of 16:10, 14 February 2021 by AlecSantos (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Conforme a adaptação continua, sintomas de privação tanto de sono SWS como REM provavelmente vão se manifestar já que há redução significativa de sono se comparado ao...")
Other languages:
English • ‎português do Brasil • ‎русский

Trifásico é o cronograma Tri core original e mais popular, que consiste em 3 núcleos e nenhuma naps soneca.

Triphasic
Tri Core 0
chart link

Total sleep4 hours 30 minutes
Proposed byLeif Weaver
DifficultyVery hard
Specification3 single-cycle core sleeps

Origem

Leij Weiver propôs o cronograma, se adaptou a ele e permaneceu nele por vários meses.[1]

Mecanismo

Os núcleos normalmente são colocados de forma equidistante, com um intervalo de 6,5h entre eles. Mas o cronograma equidistante não é necessário. Ainda assim, é recomendado evitar intervalos maiores de 8 horas. O maior intervalo que já houve adaptação é de 9 horas entres os núcleos da tarde e da noite. Espera-se que os outros intervalos sejam menores, já que a pressão do sono é maior a noite e pela manhã.

Assim como o Dual core, o núcleo da noite favorece sono SWS, e o núcleo do nascer do sol/manhã favorece sono REM. O núcleo da tarde contém uma mistura desses estágios.

Adaptação

No começo, os ciclos do sono vão continuar normalmente. O ciclo começa com leve, e então alcança o sono SWS e então finalmente termina com sono REM. No segundo núcleo, a pressão SWS é mais fraca, permitindo mais sono REM.

Conforme a adaptação continua, sintomas de privação tanto de sono SWS como REM provavelmente vão se manifestar já que há redução significativa de sono se comparado ao sono monofásico. O sono vital precisa ser reparticionado em cada núcleo de acordo com as pressões homeostáticas e circadianas.

During adaptation, the first core will be difficult to wake from, because of possible SWS wakes, which may result in oversleeps. Likewise, the second core may also be difficult, particularly when REM deprivation has accumulated to high levels. The daytime core is likely the easiest to handle, and may naturally shorten after adaptation.

Difficulty

The adaptation difficulty for triphasic (non-extended) is "very hard" due to its low total sleep and only having a one-cycle core in the SWS peak. It is significantly harder than E3, due to the need to split SWS over several cores as well as its longer gaps.

Lifestyle consideration

Because of Triphasic's daytime and evening cores at often inconvenient hours, Triphasic is not very popular. The need for a core in SWS peak makes social life in the evening difficult. As it only has 4.5 hours of total sleep, Triphasic is quite inflexible even after adaptation for average sleepers. One person has reported being able to flex a Triphasic core by up to 30 minutes. With the limited flexibility, maintaining Triphasic long-term is difficult, even if the adaptation is successful. Intense exercise may also be detrimental to the schedule, because the increased SWS requirements from the exercise can lead to SWS wakes, and may cause oversleeps. Triphasic can create a sense of long days blurred together, with wake gaps all similar in length.

Triphasic-extended, however, is much more practical in this aspect. Since the first core can start later, social events in the evening become possible. More sleep also allows for more physical training and flexibility after adaptation. The long morning-afternoon wake gap allows for many different daily activities without having to worry about sleep. Triphasic-extended has reported more successes.

Variants

Aside from the non-equidistant Triphasic scheduling which has proven to be viable by a couple of sleepers, the most popular and widely successful version is the extended version.

Extended

 
Sample Triphasic-extended

The extended version allows more room for SWS in the first core, which greatly eases adaptation. This also increases the total sleep time to 6h.

A few have adapted to a Triphasic-extended variant with a 9-10h wake gap from morning to afternoon. This makes daily activity scheduling much easier, in which the daytime core can be moved to ~16-17. The shorter gap between the evening and morning cores resembles Segmented core gap and can be utilized for various activities. The first core can begin later, up to around 23:00 thanks to the increased total sleep. The core extension also suits individuals with higher sleep requirements, for whom adapting to regular Triphasic may be impossible.

 
Alternative triphasic-extended with a longer morning core

Alternatively, it may be possible to extend the morning core to 3h, which may allow for even more social events. However, this variant has no known successes to date. A sleeper with low SWS needs and high REM needs may find this variant easier.

References

  1. Leif Weaver (2011). "Blog". Retrieved 2020-12-18.