Close Menu
Daily Guardian
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
What's On

Upcoming closure of Highland Park daycare leaves parents ‘scrambling’ for options

June 5, 2026

As murder trial begins, Lumby family’s search for justice comes with a heavy cost

June 5, 2026

Canada to limit livestock imports from Texas over flesh-eating screwworm

June 5, 2026

FIFA reverses water bottle ban at World Cup games, some restrictions apply

June 5, 2026

Global Aerospace’s SM4 Aviation Safety Program Offers Essentials on Sleep Need vs. Sleep Capacity and The Science of Sleep Banking

June 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Finance Pro
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Daily Guardian
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • Climate
  • Auto
  • Travel
  • Web Stories
Daily Guardian
Home » Global Aerospace’s SM4 Aviation Safety Program Offers Essentials on Sleep Need vs. Sleep Capacity and The Science of Sleep Banking
Press Release

Global Aerospace’s SM4 Aviation Safety Program Offers Essentials on Sleep Need vs. Sleep Capacity and The Science of Sleep Banking

By News RoomJune 5, 20265 Mins Read
Global Aerospace’s SM4 Aviation Safety Program Offers Essentials on Sleep Need vs. Sleep Capacity and The Science of Sleep Banking
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Morris Plains, NJ, June 05, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —

Recall the last time you were on a flight or duty that cut into your natural daily sleep pattern. Chances are you were annoyed at the sleep deprivation but leaned in to combat the fatigue stress with a combination of operational risk controls, personal fatigue countermeasures and grit. With experience, you will prepare for this type of operation by making sure to get a good night’s sleep ahead of time. But what about deliberately getting more sleep? Can sleep be “banked” in advance of encountering a sleep deficit? Global Aerospace’s SM4 Aviation Safety Program has answers to these questions and more.

Let’s start with a sports analogy. Many ultra-distance endurance athletes will consume excess carbohydrates the day before a race. The idea is to fill up glycogen stores to delay muscle fatigue and maintain stronger output deeper into the event. Even if you don’t run ultramarathons, you will be familiar with stocking up on essentials before an impending snowstorm.

Scientists have been debating whether sleep and fatigue follow a similar dynamic since the concept of “sleep banking” was first proposed by Rupp et al. nearly 20 years ago. The reality of sleep debt—a reflection of chronic sleep deprivation in modern society—was already well understood by then, and it seemed natural to extend the financial metaphor further.

Some sleep experts found that extending nighttime sleep prior to a period of sleep restriction produced measurably reduced deficits in alertness and performance during a subsequent period of restricted sleep. Others, however, questioned whether the investment in more sleep was simply reversing a preexisting sleep debt. A recent paper in the journal Sleep by researchers at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research aims to settle the debate.

Sleep Need vs. Sleep Capacity

How much do you sleep during the fifth night of a week-long vacation? Allowing for any lingering sleep debts to be paid off during the first few nights, how long you sleep each night in the second half of a vacation is probably the best indication of your daily sleep need.

Due to genetic variations, humans have a daily sleep need that ranges from seven to nine hours for adults. While the need for sleep is obvious, the capacity to sleep is affected by many factors including physical and mental well-being, behavioral choices and even practical limitations. Yet when those factors are controlled, the researchers found that the human brain will accumulate a surplus of “sleep-dependent restorative resources” when given the chance.

In other words, we do have the capacity to invest in excess sleep. This idea is supported by a finding in a 2015 study of sleep patterns in people who live far enough from the equator to experience a change of seasons: They sleep 50 minutes longer each night in winter, on average, than during the summer.

The Science of Sleep Banking

Having established that excess sleeping is a real thing, the Walter Reed Institute researchers proceed to explore possible mechanisms for how it occurs. One idea centers on the extended clearing of synaptic waste products that have accumulated in the brain over the course of being awake all day—a “deep cleaning” of sorts. Another hypothesis is that sleep banking increases the brain’s supply of glycogen, which gets depleted by the high energy demands of wakefulness.

The scientists assert that sleep banking is a short-term phenomenon and suggest there is a limit to how much sleep can be banked. Based on a study of rats following a sleep banking schedule compared to a control group on a normal sleep schedule, they found that an adaptive process restored sleep pressure to its homeostatic norm after about two weeks.

Yes, But…

Given the new scientific evidence supporting sleep banking, it may be tempting to forgo restorative sleep after a tough duty period, indulge in “revenge procrastination” to catch up on shows or hobbies and postpone that extra sleep until the last day before resuming work. Be careful. According to a 2018 study by sleep scientist Dr. Elizabeth Klerman and her colleagues, “Short-term sleep extension does not prevent cumulative impairment from longer-term insufficient sleep durations.”

As an aviation professional in a safety-sensitive role, your peak performance is essential to the operation. You should pay off sleep debts as soon as you can—and invest a little more beyond that when facing tough days, as an additional preventative measure.


About Global Aerospace SM4 Aviation Safety Program
The Global Aerospace SM4 Safety Program has revolutionized the way insurance specialists help their clients achieve higher levels of operational safety. SM4 was built on the concept of integrating four critical safety components: planning, prevention, response and recovery. Its mission is to help organizations manage risk, enrich training efforts, strengthen safety culture and improve safety management systems. https://sm4.global-aero.com/

Global Aerospace SM4 Aviation Safety Program Media Contact
Suzanne Keneally
Vice President, Group Head of Communications
+1 973-490-8588

  • Global Aerospace SM4 Aviation Safety Program

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

GRAL DEADLINE ALERT: Faruqi & Faruqi, LLP Reminds Grail (GRAL) Investors of Securities Class Action Deadline on August 4, 2026

Banner Health appoints Dr. John Rares Almasan as senior vice president, chief AI, data and infrastructure officer

Memocept Under Investigation: Shocking Memocept Brain Support Customer Complaints, Ingredient Claims, Effectiveness Questions, and Serious Side Effect Risks Examined

Nominations Open for Organic Grower Summit’s 2026 Grower of the Year Award

Make Great Light Launches Fully Redesigned Website

Jetterix Analyzed: A Detailed Evaluation Of The Jetterix Pressure Nozzle Trending In The United States!

Slimtide Capsule : Check How Slim Tide Supports Digestive Health and Wellness Worldwide!

Emerging Crypto Projects Focus on Infrastructure as AI Narrative Evolves Beyond Simple Token Hype

RAIN Highlights $200M Ecosystem Commitment, $100M Liquidity Expansion, and World Cup Growth Strategy Ahead of Version 2 Launch

Editors Picks

As murder trial begins, Lumby family’s search for justice comes with a heavy cost

June 5, 2026

Canada to limit livestock imports from Texas over flesh-eating screwworm

June 5, 2026

FIFA reverses water bottle ban at World Cup games, some restrictions apply

June 5, 2026

Global Aerospace’s SM4 Aviation Safety Program Offers Essentials on Sleep Need vs. Sleep Capacity and The Science of Sleep Banking

June 5, 2026

Latest News

City of Calgary working to fix smell of ‘garbage juice’ affecting southeast residents

June 5, 2026

Three U.K. men plead guilty in death of Owen Sound, Ont., restaurant owner

June 5, 2026

Congress still can’t decide what to do about warrantless surveillance

June 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 Daily Guardian Canada. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version