For decades, sleep recommendations have largely been presented as universal — seven to eight hours for adults, full stop. But a growing body of research, now gaining broader attention through physicians willing to share it, is revealing that sleep is far more nuanced than that. Most notably, women need more sleep than men, and the reasons for this are grounded in neuroscience.
A physician recently explained that women likely require around 20 additional minutes of sleep per night. The key factor is multitasking — a cognitively expensive mental process that requires the brain to constantly divide, redirect, and recalibrate its attention. Women tend to engage in this kind of thinking more frequently and more extensively during the day, which leaves the brain with more consolidation and recovery work to do overnight.
The time it takes to fall asleep is also more informative than most people realize. A normal, healthy sleep onset falls in the 10-to-20-minute window. Falling asleep faster isn’t necessarily a sign of good health — it could indicate that the body is overwhelmed by sleep deprivation. Taking 30 minutes or more consistently may point toward insomnia or chronic stress disrupting the transition from wakefulness to sleep.
Dreams, despite their often vivid and meaningful nature, are almost entirely lost every morning. The physician confirms that approximately 95 percent of dream content disappears within minutes of waking, because the brain doesn’t store dream experiences in long-term memory the way it does waking experiences. The simple, effective fix is to keep a journal at the bedside and write immediately upon waking, before the memories fade.
The remaining two facts carry significant daily-life implications. Seventeen consecutive hours of wakefulness impairs cognitive function to a level comparable to a blood alcohol concentration of 0.05 percent — making it a genuine safety concern for drivers, workers, and decision-makers. And with melatonin, the physician strongly recommends starting with just 0.5 mg, a dose that mirrors the body’s own natural secretion and tends to be more effective than the high-dose options that fill supplement shelves.