CONCEPT
Ultradian Rhythms
The <em>ninety-to-one-hundred-twenty minute cycles</em> of alertness and fatigue that govern human cognitive function throughout the day — the biological basis for cyclical engagement and the specific duration Selye's prescriptions calibrate to.
Ultradian rhythms are the biological cycles shorter than a day that govern many physiological processes, including the sleep-cycle architecture, hormonal pulsatility, and — most relevant for knowledge work — the cycling of cognitive alertness. Research beginning with Nathaniel Kleitman's basic rest-activity cycle (BRAC) has established that human attention oscillates in approximately ninety-minute cycles throughout the waking day, with periods of peak alertness followed by inevitable troughs during which the prefrontal cortex requires restoration. The organism can sustain focused cognitive work for roughly ninety minutes before the quality of attention degrades, the default mode network signals for activation, and output shifts from creative to mechanical. Recognition of ultradian rhythms provides the biological foundation for the cyclical engagement Selye's framework prescribes — not an arbitrary policy but a calibration to the organism's actual capacity structure.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Nathaniel Kleitman, who also identified REM sleep in 1953, proposed the basic rest-activity cycle as the daytime continuation of the sleep-cycle architecture. His hypothesis — that