Mathematical Models of Sleep — Process S, Circadian Rhythm and the Two-Process Model
Why do you feel sleepy after 16 hours awake regardless of the time of day, yet feel alert at 11 PM but desperately tired at 3 AM? Because two independent biological processes — a homeostatic sleep drive and a circadian alertness signal — interact to create the human sleep-wake cycle. Alexander Borbély's two-process model, proposed in 1982, captures this interaction with remarkable predictive power using nothing more than exponential functions and a sinusoid.
1. The Two-Process Framework
The Borbély model postulates that sleep-wake behaviour is controlled by two separable biological processes:
- Process S (Sleep homeostasis): a sleep-promoting drive that builds exponentially during wakefulness and dissipates exponentially during sleep. Neurobiological correlate: adenosine accumulation in the basal forebrain during wakefulness (caffeine works by blocking adenosine A1 and A2A receptors).
- Process C (Circadian clock): an approximately 24-hour oscillation in alerting/arousal driven by the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) in the hypothalamus, entrained by light via retinal photoreceptors. Acts as an internal clock independent of sleep history.
Sleep occurs when Process S (pressure to sleep) exceeds an upper threshold modulated by Process C; wake occurs when Process S drops below a lower threshold. The two thresholds themselves oscillate with the circadian rhythm, creating a "window of opportunity" for sleep that aligns with night.
2. Process S — Homeostatic Sleep Pressure
Process S is modeled as an exponential with different time constants for waking and sleeping:
The neurophysiological markers of Process S are slow-wave activity (SWA, 0.5–4.5 Hz delta power) in the EEG during NREM sleep: SWA is highest at the start of sleep when S is highest, and decreases through the night as S dissipates — exactly as predicted by the model.
3. Process C — The Circadian Oscillator
Process C is modeled as a damped sinusoidal oscillation with a near-24-hour period:
The SCN generates the circadian signal even in constant darkness (it acts as a self-sustaining oscillator). Light resets the phase — morning light advances the clock (earlier timing); evening light delays it. The timing of the circadian nadir around 4 AM explains why shift workers driving home at that hour have peak drowsiness crash risk.
4. Sleep-Wake Transitions
In the Borbély model, the thresholds for sleep onset (H_u, upper) and wake onset (H_l, lower) are modulated by the circadian process:
The circadian system actively promotes wakefulness in the evening — counteracting rising Process S to keep humans alert until after dark. Edgar et al. (1993) confirmed this with lesioning studies: SCN destruction eliminated the daily sleep-wake cycling, leaving rats with constant short fragmented sleep bouts determined only by Process S.
5. Ultradian REM Cycles
Within a night's sleep, the brain cycles through NREM and REM stages with an ultradian period of approximately 90 minutes. This cycling is not modeled by the two-process model — it requires separate mechanisms:
- NREM stages (N1→N2→N3): N3 (slow-wave sleep, SWS) dominates early in the night when Process S is highest. SWS is associated with memory consolidation (declarative memory) and growth hormone secretion.
- REM sleep: increases in later cycles as the night progresses and Process S dissipates. Associated with emotional memory processing, narrative dreaming, and motor memory. Suppressed by adenosine (which explains why caffeine late in the day reduces REM duration).
6. Sleep Deprivation and Recovery
The two-process model accurately predicts cognitive performance during partial and total sleep deprivation. Sustained wakefulness elevates Process S monotonically; performance on psychomotor vigilance tests (PVT) decreases in proportion.
7. Jet Lag and Shift Work
Jet lag occurs when the internal circadian phase (Process C) is misaligned with the external environmental cues (light-dark cycle at new location). The SCN re-entrains at a rate of ~1 hour per day eastward and ~1.5 hours per day westward — meaning a 9-hour eastward flight (e.g., New York to London) takes roughly 9 days to fully re-entrain.
The asymmetric recovery (westward easier than eastward) occurs because:
- The free-running period is ~24.2h (slightly longer than 24h) — naturally drifts later.
- Eastward travel requires Phase Advance (earlier timing) — fighting the natural drift.
- Westward travel requires Phase Delay (later timing) — aligning with the natural drift.
Shift workers who rotate between day and night shifts never fully re-entrain. Their Process C remains synchronized to daylight while they must sleep during the day — explaining elevated rates of metabolic syndrome, cardiovascular disease, and cancer attributable to chronic circadian disruption.
Mathematical "circadian misalignment" can be quantified as the phase difference |φ_clock − φ_environment| integrated over time, predicting cumulative health consequences — an active area of chronobiology research.