Way before your little one makes their grand debut in the world, you start interacting with them. You may notice the little kicks, movements, and other activities—how they’re quiet when you’re walking around, but active when you lay down for some rest.
It’s natural to wonder why babies are active in the womb sometimes, but not others. What are they doing when they aren’t kicking you? Do babies sleep in the womb? Do they dream? How long do they sleep in the womb?
We’ve got these answers, and more, in our expert-backed guide to understanding baby’s sleep in utero.
What’s going on in the womb?
Babies do sleep in the womb. In fact, they sleep a lot.
By the time you reach about 38 weeks, your baby is sleeping 95 percent of the time! And it’s during this time that your little one’s brain is developing at a supersonic rate. This will lead to around 100 billion neurons in your baby’s brain when they are born.
How do baby sleep patterns develop?
Even with technological advancements, it’s impossible to measure the direct brain activity of a baby who is still in utero. Instead, researchers can learn about babies’ sleep habits from observing their eye movements.
As your little one’s nervous system grows and develops, a sleep-wake cycle starts to emerge. Around the seventh month of pregnancy, scientists can observe a baby’s first rapid eye movements.
A baby’s developing brain moves back and forth between REM and non-REM sleep every 20 to 40 minutes. During REM sleep, the baby’s brain waves show a lot of activity, similar to an awake brain. During non-REM sleep, their brain activity shows periods of rest.
These sleep-wake cycles indicate the development of your baby’s first mature sleep patterns.
Did you know?
Your little one sleeps about 95 percent of the time in your womb.
Did you know?
Your little one sleeps about 95 percent of the time in your womb.
Scientists don’t know yet whether these sleep cycles slowly develop over time, or simply appear one day. However, in 2009, researchers studied sheep fetuses to understand when the earliest sleep patterns start. Researchers found that the sheep fetus showed brain activity which suggested very early and immature sleep cycles that later developed into more mature patterns.
Why do babies need to sleep in the womb?
Babies need to sleep in the womb because it’s during the deep REM sleep that their neural connections are rapidly developing. As these neural connections form and strengthen, different areas of the baby’s brain become active. The ability to hear, move, synthesize information and respond to certain voices and sounds develops when they sleep.
According to Samantha Radford, PhD, an exposure scientist with a focus on maternal-child health and the owner of Evidence-Based Mommy,
Sleep allows their brains to develop and allows them to process their experiences. It also helps develop their ability for memory.
“ Sleep allows their brains to develop and allows them to process their experiences. It also helps develop their ability for memory.
Every bodily function of your baby—from their ability hear, see, understand, and process sounds and sensations—is a result of their brain development or their neural pathways forming and connecting. And most of this magic happens while your baby is sleeping.
Do babies dream in the womb?
Now that we know babies sleep in the warmth of your womb, it’s only natural to wonder, do babies dream in there, and if they do, when do they start?
All signs point to—probably yes, thanks to our observations of REM. According to Dr. Radford, “While we don’t know for sure if babies in the womb dream, we know that their sleep patterns include REM sleep, which is when we dream, so it is likely that babies do dream in utero.”
What are the four sleep stages in the womb?
First Trimester
At 11 weeks, the brain cells that cause us to fall asleep are not yet formed, but this will happen soon. Before it does, your little one will be in a constant state of sleep.
Second Trimester
By this time, the brain cells that cause your baby to fall asleep have formed, and they’ll start waking up and falling asleep in cycles.
Third Trimester
At seven months, your baby’s eyes will start moving rapidly as if they were dreaming. This first sign of eye movement tells us that their brain is going back and forth between REM and non-REM sleep, and that they’re developing adult-like sleep cycles.
During the last three months in the womb, their neural connections will grow at a meteoric pace when they are in REM sleep—so much so that a week before they are born, their REM sleep increases from nine to 12 hours each day.
Are sleep patterns in the womb indicative of how a baby will sleep after birth?
Yes—researchers have found connections between how babies sleep during late pregnancy and their snoozing patterns after baby is born, although maybe not in the way you would expect.
As Dr. Radford says, “A 2008 study showed that the more the baby sleeps in utero, the less they sleep after birth. This actually means the child has a more mature sleeping pattern after birth—after all, newborns need to wake every few hours to eat.”
While your little one is dozing off in your womb, you can rest in the knowledge that their hours of sleep are helping in the development of their brain and body, preparing them for the time when they arrive in this world and meet you.
FAQs
Q: How do babies breathe in the womb?
A: Babies in the womb breathe through their umbilical cord, which delivers oxygen-rich blood from the mother to the baby and removes waste products. It’s a miraculous process that keeps your little one healthy and growing strong.
Q: Do babies cry in the womb?
A: While babies can make sounds in the womb, they don’t cry like they do after birth. They may make soft grunts, hiccups, or other noises, but don’t worry – these sounds are perfectly normal and are signs that your baby is healthy and developing as they should.
Q: Why do babies get hiccups in the womb?
A: Hiccups are common in babies in the womb, and they can happen frequently. It’s believed that hiccups are caused by the baby’s developing nervous system and are a sign that their diaphragm muscles are developing and strengthening in preparation for breathing after birth.
Q: When can babies hear in the womb?
A: Your baby’s hearing starts to develop around 18-20 weeks gestation, and they can hear various sounds in the womb, including your voice and heartbeat. So go ahead and talk, sing, and read to your little one while they’re still in the womb – it’s a great way to bond with your baby and help them develop their hearing.
Sources:
- Sleep in babies in the last week of pregnancy. National Library of Medicine. 2007. “Neurophysiologic Measurement of Continuity in the Sleep of Fetuses during the Last Week of Pregnancy and in Newborns.”
- Research on sheep fetuses. Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science. 2008. “Nonlinear analysis and modeling of cortical activation and deactivation patterns in the immature fetal electrocorticogram.”