Extra-auditory effects of noise in laboratory animals: the relationship between noise and sleep
Arnaud Rabat (IMNSSA)

TL;DR
This paper reviews how noise affects sleep in laboratory animals, highlighting that environmental noise, especially unpredictable and high-frequency sounds, causes significant sleep disturbances and variability based on individual stress responses.
Contribution
It synthesizes existing research on noise-induced sleep disturbances, emphasizing the roles of noise characteristics and biological factors in these effects.
Findings
Environmental noise causes greater sleep disturbances than white noise.
Unpredictability of noise events increases sleep fragmentation.
Chronic noise exposure leads to permanent sleep reduction and variability.
Abstract
Noise has both auditory and extra-auditory effects. Some of the most deleterious extra-auditory effects of noise are those leading to sleep disturbances. These disturbances seem to be related to both endogenous (physical parameters) and exogenous (sex, age) factors of noise. Despite correlative relations between noise level and awakenings, the scientific community has not reached consensus regarding a specific action of these factors on the different sleep stages. In animal research, 2 complementary main fields of research exist. One is focused on the positive modulation of sleep by repeated tone stimulation. The other concerns noise-related sleep disturbances. The few studies that have investigated noise-related sleep disturbances suggest the following conclusions. First, sleep disturbances are greater upon exposure to environmental noise, whose frequency spectrum is characterized by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoise Effects and Management · Neuroscience and Music Perception · Hearing, Cochlea, Tinnitus, Genetics
