Do ghosts really exist? What lies behind ghosts, demons and aliens – according to sleep researchers
Psychologist claims most late-night paranormal experiences are simply down to sleep paralysis and exploding head syndrome
If you believe in the paranormal you might not be surprised if
you hear stories of deceased loved ones appearing during the night, huge
explosions heard just as someone is drifting off with no obvious cause,
and other peculiar occurrences. But what if you don’t?
My interest in the paranormal started with an impromptu coffee with a colleague, Chris French,
who researches reports of paranormal experiences. He told me stories of
countless people who had recounted such events. These experiences
tended to start while lying in bed. Then something unusual would happen –
perhaps a demon would appear or the environment would seem strange or
there would be a sensed presence. The person having this experience
might also report being glued to their mattress, tarmacked into the bed,
totally unable to move.
It’s unsurprising that people who experience such things might interpret them as paranormal. But certain phenomena such as sleep paralysis
provide an alternative to paranormal explanations for such occurrences.
Hence my interest in the subject, as a sleep researcher.
Sleep paralysis
When we sleep, we cycle through different stages. We start the night
in non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep – which gets progressively
deeper. We then cycle back until we hit rapid eye movement (REM) sleep.
During REM sleep we are most likely to have vivid dreams. At this stage
we are also paralysed, perhaps as a safety mechanism to stop us acting
out our dreams so that we don’t end up attempting to fly.
But during sleep paralysis, features of REM sleep continue into
waking life. Those who experience it will feel awake yet might
experience dream-like hallucinations and struggle to move. This
experience is pretty common, occurring in around 8% of people (although estimates vary dramatically depending on who we are asking). It’s even possible to induce sleep paralysis in some people, by disrupting their sleep in specific ways.
Certain researchers, French among them, believe that this explains a
huge number of paranormal accounts. Information about sleep paralysis is
finally seeping into public awareness, but we now need to understand more about this common complaint.
Our preliminary work, which I recount in my new book Nodding Off: The science of sleep from cradle to grave, hints at possible genetic and environmental explanations
for why some people are more likely than others to experience sleep
paralysis. This now needs to be replicated using much larger samples.
Reviewing the literature, we have also highlighted a host of other variables associated with this common experience, including stress, trauma, psychiatric difficulties and physical illnesses.
Sleep paralysis aside, how else are sleep researchers helping to
explain paranormal experiences? People sometimes describe experiencing
huge explosions during the night which simply can’t be explained. There
is no sign that a shelf has fallen down or a car has backfired. There is
no one playing the electric guitar next to their head.
Again, this can be linked to our sleep - this time explained by “exploding head syndrome”, a term coined relatively recently
by the neurologist JMS Pearce. When we fall asleep, the reticular
formation of the brainstem (a part of our brain involved in
consciousness) typically starts to inhibit our ability to move, see and
hear things. When we experience a “bang” in our sleep this might be
because of a delay in this process. Instead of the reticular formation shutting down the auditory neurons, they might fire at once.
As with sleep paralysis, this phenomenon is also under-researched.
For this very reason, in 2017 my colleagues and I joined forces with BBC Focus and Brian Sharpless, a leading expert on this phenomenon, to collect data on this topic.
Imps and ghouls
Finally, what might scientists make of precognitive dreams? We might
dream of a friend we haven’t seen for years only to have them call us
the very next day. French thinks science can provide an explanation for
this too. Referencing work by John Allen Paulos that focuses on
probabilities, he explains how such an occurrence may be surprising on any single day, but over time, quite likely to occur.
Researching my book, I spoke to Mrs Sinclair, who is 70, and lives
alone. She told me about what she had thought was a ghost living in her
house, an imp throttling her during the night and other things that had
left her petrified. Having scientific explanations provided her with
immense comfort and she no longer believes in paranormal explanations
for the things that she experienced.
Our hope is that scientific explanations of paranormal experiences
might help others by lowering anxiety. Decreasing anxiety has also been hypothesised
as a potential method by which to reduce sleep paralysis. So, perhaps
providing more information about these unusual experiences might even
mean that things are less likely to go bump in the night.
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