Episode #435 from 40:14

Math gaffe

Listen to Jocko thing. And then, there's this phenomenon called entrainment where if you force yourself to exercise or eat or socialize or view bright light at a certain time of day for three to seven days in a row, pretty soon there's an anticipatory circuit that gets generated. This is why anyone, in theory, can become a morning person to some degree or another. This is also a beautiful example of why you wake up before your alarm clock goes off. People wake up and all of a sudden it goes off, it wasn't because it clicked. It's because you have this incredible timekeeping mechanism that exists in sleep. There's some papers that have been published in the last couple of years, Nature Neuroscience and elsewhere, showing that people can answer math problems in their sleep. Simple math problems but math problems nonetheless. This does not mean that if you ask your partner a question in sleep, that they're going to answer accurately. They might screw up the whole cumulative probability of 20% across multiple months.

June 28, 2024Unknown15 chaptersAndrew Huberman
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Listen to Jocko thing. And then, there's this phenomenon called entrainment where if you force yourself to exercise or eat or socialize or view bright light at a certain time of day for three to seven days in a row, pretty soon there's an anticipatory circuit that gets generated. This is why anyone, in theory, can become a morning person to some degree or another. This is also a beautiful example of why you wake up before your alarm clock goes off. People wake up and all of a sudden it goes off, it wasn't because it clicked. It's because you have this incredible timekeeping mechanism that exists in sleep. There's some papers that have been published in the last couple of years, Nature Neuroscience and elsewhere, showing that people can answer math problems in their sleep. Simple math problems but math problems nonetheless. This does not mean that if you ask your partner a question in sleep, that they're going to answer accurately. They might screw up the whole cumulative probability of 20% across multiple months.

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Math gaffe chapter timestamp | Andrew Huberman: Focus, Controversy, Politics, and Relationships | EpisodeIndex