I mean I am interested in undergoing adaptation through sleep deprivation, then something like uberman then everyman.
It would not be viable for me to stay in a polyphasic schedule next year. Ultimately, I will have to return to something largely along the lines of segmented or monophasic. Still, I have heard that undergoing polyphasic-style adaptation can help you to become acclimatised to getting REM sleep in a 20-30 minute period, something I currently can’t do, but might be useful if I have a sleep debt or if I know I’m going to do an all-nighter etc.
So the idea is adapting to polyphasic then switching back to segmented or monophasic. Would I expect to nap better afterwards? Is this likely to be useful or worthwhile?
O. I dunno. I have some more doubts about polyphasic sleep these days; last time I checked in the Zeo forums, no one had posted a complete writeup demonstrating a polyphasic lifestyle much less accompanying metrics that the lifestyle hadn’t hurt them (I’d particularly like spaced repetition statistics). And since Zeos provide real data, much more so than blog posts claiming successful adaptation...
I mean I am interested in undergoing adaptation through sleep deprivation, then something like uberman then everyman.
It would not be viable for me to stay in a polyphasic schedule next year. Ultimately, I will have to return to something largely along the lines of segmented or monophasic. Still, I have heard that undergoing polyphasic-style adaptation can help you to become acclimatised to getting REM sleep in a 20-30 minute period, something I currently can’t do, but might be useful if I have a sleep debt or if I know I’m going to do an all-nighter etc.
So the idea is adapting to polyphasic then switching back to segmented or monophasic. Would I expect to nap better afterwards? Is this likely to be useful or worthwhile?
O. I dunno. I have some more doubts about polyphasic sleep these days; last time I checked in the Zeo forums, no one had posted a complete writeup demonstrating a polyphasic lifestyle much less accompanying metrics that the lifestyle hadn’t hurt them (I’d particularly like spaced repetition statistics). And since Zeos provide real data, much more so than blog posts claiming successful adaptation...