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editorial
. 2024 Sep 2;6(5):fcae266. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcae266

Summer days: research culture and the neuroscience of taking a break

Tara L Spires-Jones 1,
PMCID: PMC11368153  PMID: 39229488

Our editor discusses taking a vacation without a computer and some neuroscience evidence supporting the need for work–life balance.

Graphical Abstract

Graphical Abstract.

Graphical Abstract


Welcome to volume 6, issue 5 of Brain Communications. I hope you have all enjoyed the summer. I’m writing this after an amazing two-week vacation in Barbados with my family and without my laptop. Many thanks to our Associate Editor Paul Skehel and our editorial team for keeping Brain Communications running during my break. Taking time to completely disconnect from work is not typical for some people in academia where we wear many hats and make commitments. However, research culture has started to shift with more open conversations about managing work load. In a survey by Nature, 75% of 1748 academics interviewed said that they have dialled back their work efforts over the past few years.1

There is strong evidence that adequate sleep and exercise boost cognition and that conversely stress impairs cognitive function, arguing for managing work–life balance and taking breaks.2-4 Recent data from Mueller et al.5 published in Brain Communication supports the link between sleep deficits and cognitive decline during aging. Spending two weeks snorkelling, scuba diving, taking walks in the jungle and not setting alarms to wake up early was certainly refreshing for me. As an added bonus, I managed to drown my smartphone in the Caribbean taking away my crutch to keep checking emails. This also helped with sleep as neuroscience research, including a recent study by Höhn et al.6 in Brain Communications, indicates that smartphone use before bedtime can impair sleep.

Alongside sleep and exercise, spending hours observing sea creatures (see ‘Graphical Abstract’ for a new friend from the trip) and experiencing another culture were inspiring. Despite the full inbox and to-do lists waiting at the end of vacation, being completely disconnected from work has left me feeling more creative and able to come back into projects with new ideas and renewed enthusiasm. I hope all of you dear readers also find time to take a break and disconnect.

The cover image for this issue comes from Schaper et al.7 and shows two brain networks derived from lesions causing parkinsonism versus seizures on opposing ends of a seesaw, illustrating an inverse relationship between these two common brain diseases.

Competing interests

The authors report no competing interests.

References

  • 1. Forrester  N. Fed up and burnt out: ‘quiet quitting’ hits academia. Nature. 2023;615(7953):751–753. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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  • 5. Mueller  C, Nenert  R, Catiul  C, Pilkington  J, Szaflarski  JP, Amara  AW. Brain metabolites are associated with sleep architecture and cognitive functioning in older adults. Brain Commun. 2024;6(4):fcae245. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 6. Höhn  C, Hahn  MA, Gruber  G, Pletzer  B, Cajochen  C, Hoedlmoser  K. Effects of evening smartphone use on sleep and declarative memory consolidation in male adolescents and young adults. Brain Commun. 2024;6(3):fcae173. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
  • 7. Schaper  FLWVJ, Morton-Dutton  M, Pacheco-Barrios  N, et al.  Brain lesions causing parkinsonism versus seizures map to opposite brain networks. Brain Commun. 2024;6(3):fcae196. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]

Articles from Brain Communications are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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