Does Sleep Deprivation Fuel Creativity?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Ivan Seeking
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Problem solving
Join the discussion
Ask a follow-up here, or get your own question answered by working scientists, mathematicians and engineers — people, not an autocomplete.
Real named experts · corrections over time · the nuance an AI answer skips
7 replies · 3K views
Messages
8,252
Reaction score
2,666
Over the years I have noticed a pattern: I tend to do my best work after fixating on a problem for a very long time, and usually after getting far too little sleep and drinking way too much coffee. If I am well rested and working a sane schedule, I never seem to pop off with those OMG solutions. And my best ideas - the ones that have essentially made my career - came late into the night, and often in the wee hours of the morning.

During the month of December I took the first real break that I've had in years - for three weeks I barely even thought about work. It has taken just as long to get focused again. No matter how hard I tried, the ideas just weren't coming. Only now is the light beginning to shine again.

In a metaphorical sense, it is as if creativity has momentum and inertia.
 
Last edited:
on Phys.org
There is a book - Wide Awake at 3 AM. I received a copy years ago when I bought a subscription of Scientific American.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/0716717964/?tag=pfamazon01-20

Sometimes it works for me, although I think I do my best thinking in the shower, or sometimes during the weekend, or when walking, or when gardening, and sometimes after relaxing and drinking a few beers.
 
I often solve my problems in the shower - after a night of sleep, a clear mind and a chance to sneak up on a skittish problem from cover of tall grass.
 
DaveC426913 said:
I often solve my problems in the shower - after a night of sleep, a clear mind and a chance to sneak up on a skittish problem from cover of tall grass.

There is a difference between problem solving, and creative problem solving. If I'm working a pure math or engineering problem, I do better after getting sleep. However, for problems that require thinking outside the box, uninterrupted continuity of thought seems to be almost as important as, or more important than rest.
 
DaveC426913 said:
I often solve my problems in the shower - after a night of sleep, a clear mind and a chance to sneak up on a skittish problem from cover of tall grass.

I have noticed I come up with solutions over a lot of things in the shower or drying myself afterwards.
 
My theory on this is that being awake for extended periods of time is incredibly boring so your mind will do anything to get to sleep even if that means solving all your problems.
 
StevieTNZ said:
I have noticed I come up with solutions over a lot of things in the shower or drying myself afterwards.
I don't have a lot of things in the shower - soaping up and rinsing down. How many things do you have in the shower? :biggrin: