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Your brain operates on nested rhythms—500ms reset waves, 10-second vascular cycles, and forced maintenance windows when you skip sleep. New 2025 research reveals how stress and sleep deprivation don't just make you tired—they destroy the rare neurons that keep these rhythms alive. ⏰ Live at 6pm Pacific 👉 Black Friday QEEG & Neurofeedback Specials :https://www.peakbrain.global/black-fr... 👉 Book a free consult call: https://calendly.com/drhill1 This is an interactive stream—bring your questions about brain patterns, neurofeedback, phenotypes, or anything brain-related. Whether you're new to neuroscience or a seasoned biohacker, all levels welcome! In this video: Three breakthrough papers mapped this at three timescales: • 500 milliseconds — Rotating waves reset your PFC after distraction. This is why "multitasking" is impossible—every context switch costs you half a second minimum. • 10 seconds — Rare nNOS neurons drive vascular oscillations that deliver O2 and clear waste. Chronic stress kills these cells. • 2-5 minutes — When sleep-deprived, your brain hijacks waking moments for forced maintenance. You're offline for 15 seconds while CSF flushes your brain. *Key insight:* You can't think and clean simultaneously. Healthy cognition requires rhythmic alternation. Disrupt the rhythm (stress, sleep deprivation, multitasking) and the system collapses: errors accumulate, forced lapses intrude, pacemaker neurons die. *Primary sources:* Batabyal et al. (2025) - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience - https://doi.org/10.1162/JOCN.a.2410 Turner et al. (2025) - eLife - https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.105649.3 Yang et al. (2025) - Nature Neuroscience - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41593-025-02... Tags cognitive neuroscience, brain rhythms, multitasking myth, task switching, sleep deprivation, stress and brain, vasomotion, glymphatic system, prefrontal cortex, cognitive performance, nNOS neurons, traveling waves, neurodegeneration, biohacking, brain optimization