What you think before bed shapes your sleep
STUDY: Wick AZ et al, Journal of Sleep Research 2026
STUDY TYPE: Review article (theoretical framework with empirical evidence)
FUNDING: European Research Council (Horizon 2020, grant 667875), Swiss National Science Foundation, University of Fribourg
Background
Most insomnia models focus on pre-sleep worry and rumination as problems that delay sleep onset. What happens after you fall asleep gets less attention. This review proposes a new hypothesis, Mental Concept Reactivation (MCR): that thoughts, expectations, and intentions activated before sleep are spontaneously reactivated during sleep itself, continuing to shape sleep quality from the inside.
The Study
- A theoretical review drawing on lab studies, plus existing literature on memory consolidation and emotion appraisal.
- Supporting experiments tested stress anticipation, deliberate sleep intentions, hypnotic suggestion, on-call simulation, and auditory reactivation of relaxation cues during sleep.
Key Findings
- Simply intending to sleep poorly worsened objective sleep; intending to sleep well did not help.
- High alert is a problem. Nurses asked to listen for a tone during the night slept worse even when no tone was ever played.
- Anticipating stress worsened slow-wave sleep.
- Hypnotic suggestions to “sleep deeper,” by contrast, increased slow-wave sleep and growth hormone levels, but only in highly hypnotizable subjects.
Practice Implications
- Sleep starts in the hour before we go to bed. Lifestyle factors that deepen sleep include relaxation, sleep music, blue-light blocking glasses, and mindfulness.
—Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report







