sleep Science Hub

Here is the complete 350-word editorial introduction, written to E-E-A-T standards with the voice, structure, and precision your Sleep Science Hub requires:

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## The Sleep Science Hub

Sleep science has accelerated faster in the past decade than in any preceding generation of research. The discovery of the glymphatic system in 2013 — the brain’s dedicated waste-clearance mechanism, active almost exclusively during deep sleep — reframed sleep as a biological necessity rather than a passive state. The 2017 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, awarded for the molecular mechanisms governing circadian rhythms, confirmed that sleep timing is not a lifestyle preference but a genetically encoded system with direct health consequences. Every article in this hub is built on that peer-reviewed evidence base. We reference primary sources — journal papers, not interpretations of journal papers — and all health-adjacent content is reviewed by Dr. Sarah Mitchell, CCSH, a Certified Clinical Sleep Health Specialist with 12 years in behavioural sleep medicine.

**New here? Start with these four guides — in this order.** Begin with the [Sleep Stages Guide](#) to understand the architecture of a night’s sleep: what N1, N2, N3, and REM actually do and why each stage matters. Move to [Sleep Cycles Explained](#) to understand the 90-minute ultradian rhythm that every calculator on this site is built around. Then read [How Much Sleep Do I Need](#) to understand your personal duration target by age, chronotype, and lifestyle context. Finally, work through the [Circadian Rhythm Guide](#) to understand the timing system that determines when your sleep is restorative — not just how long it lasts. These four guides give you the foundation to interpret every calculator result on this site with genuine understanding.

Our approach to evidence is deliberate. We cite primary sources — not secondary summaries of them. Where evidence is emerging or conflicting, we say so explicitly. We distinguish between observational associations (X correlates with Y in this population) and established causal mechanisms (X causes Y through mechanism Z). Sleep science has significant gaps. We highlight them rather than filling them with confident-sounding claims that the research does not yet support.

If you identify a study we have missed, a claim without a citation, or an interpretation you believe is wrong, use the [Contact page](#). We update articles when new research changes the evidence base. Every article in this hub shows a visible **Last updated** date and reviewer credit — so you always know how current the information is.

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## Implementation Notes for WordPress / Kadence

**Placement:** Insert this block as a custom HTML block at the top of your Sleep Science Hub category template, above the article grid — not inside the loop.

**Anchor links:** Replace the four `[#]` placeholders with your actual internal URLs for the Sleep Stages Guide, Sleep Cycles Explained, How Much Sleep Do I Need, and Circadian Rhythm Guide pages.

**Schema tip:** Wrap this block in a `

` or add a `speakable` CSS selector targeting this block in your `MedicalWebPage` schema — Google’s AI Overviews actively pull from speakable-designated editorial introductions on health hubs.