Tuesday , March 26 2024

Lack Of Sleep Shrinks Men’s Testicles, Expert Says (Watch Video)

A Professor at University of California (UC), Professor Matthew Walker, has said that men who don’t get enough sleep have smaller testicles than those who get enough sleep.

This came as a shocker to those present at the venue where the expert made this revelation.

“Men who sleep five hours a night have significantly smaller testicles than those who sleep seven hours or more,” Walker, a UC Berkeley professor of psychology and neuroscience, told the audience at the popular media organization’s April 15-19 conference in Vancouver, Canada.

The video of Walker’s 19-minute “Sleep is your superpower” talk was just posted on the TED Talks website and received more than 1 million views in the first 72 hours (as of publication, it’s up to more than 1,650,000).

Aria Bendix, an innovation reporter for Business Insider who watched more than 100 talks at the conference, was impressed.

“Most of the time, I tune out recommendations to get more sleep, partly because I hear them so often,” she wrote in her review of the conference. “But one short talk by Matt Walker, a sleep scientist, and I’m going to bed early from now on.”

In his talk, Walker, author of the bestseller “Why We Sleep” and director of the campus’s Center for Human Sleep Science, reviews what happens to the brain and the body when we don’t get enough nightly shut-eye.

“Without sleep, there is low energy and disease. With sleep, there is vitality and health,” Walker tells Berkeley News, noting that a growing body of research links sleep deprivation to such diseases as cancer, Alzheimer’s, obesity, diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and stroke, as well as anxiety and depression.

A sleep evangelist, Walker’s goal is to reverse a trend in which people, especially younger generations, get less sleep than they need — and brag about it.

 

Watch Matt Walker’s TED Talk here.
Credit: TED

“In 1942, more than 90 percent of Americans were sleeping more than six hours a night. Today, almost 50 percent of Americans are surviving on a nightly six hours or less,” he told Berkeley News. “We need to reclaim our right to a full night of sleep, without embarrassment or the stigma of laziness.”

Source: University Of Carlifornia

 

About Chinenye Nwabueze

Nwabueze is a writer with passion for cutting-edge news

Check Also

Florida student knocks out teacher then pummels her unconscious body after she seized his Nintendo Switch during class (video)

A 17-year-old student at Matanzas High School in Palm Coast, Florida was arrested after he …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

%d bloggers like this: