2026-06-08
1 小时 57 分钟What was it that they ate that day that impacted how they slept that night?
And we found that higher intakes of fiber were associated with more deep sleep,
higher intakes of saturated fat, less deep sleep, and then more refined carbohydrates, simple sugars, more arousals.
You're not getting deep, slow-wave sleep, REM sleep as much as you would otherwise.
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
My guest today is Dr. Marie-Pierre St-Onge,
a professor of nutritional medicine at the Institute of Human Nutrition at Columbia University School of Medicine.
Today, we discuss how you eat impacts your sleep, and how you sleep impacts what you eat.
As well as how your body utilizes food depending on how you slept.
Now we've talked about food and we've talked about sleep many times before on this podcast,
but Dr. St-Onge's work is unique because she runs one of the few laboratories
in the world to look at the bi-directional relationship between sleep and food.
For instance, you'll learn how even modest sleep deprivation increases hunger, but differently in men and women.
In men, it happens to increase the hormones that drive the desire to eat,
whereas in women, it reduces naturally made peptides such as GLP, which suppress hunger.
Today's discussion gets into the specific actionable items that you can do to improve
your sleep and the way that your body handles food and hunger.
We talk about the role of sleep in regulating blood sugar, cortisol levels, overall metabolism,
and cardiometabolic health.