Pete Bils, Sleep Number's vice president of sleep science and research, has some sound sleep advice for Super Bowl visitors on how to make the most of their visit.
Minneapolis – based Sleep Number is a member of the Super Bowl host committee and has a display on the Nicollet Mall and the first floor of the old Dayton's department store where visitors can get an interactive experience of the company's latest most innovative bed, their 360 Smart Bed.
Visitors can give the bed a test drive inside and then stop outside to their booth on the mall and play a virtual reality football game that demonstrates the negative effects of poor sleep.
With more than 20 years researching sleep Bils said the good news is most visitors to the game are going to have a short trip - 3 to 4 days for most. And visitors, including both East Coast teams playing in the game, won't experience severe time changes. That means people will acclimate quickly and recover in a day or two when they get home.
But Bils (@SleepGeekPete) expects that most people will cheat their sleep during their stay, comparing the disruption to major holidays. But he wouldn't advocate people try to stay up for 24 to 36 hours straight.
His Super Bowl sleep advice starts at home. "Arrive well rested," Bils said. "You are better able to handle disruptions in your sleep if you have strong sleep habits."
Even with short trips and less than three or more time-zone changes Bils urges people to aware of time. He suggests keeping two timepieces, one set to local time and one set to home time. Use your home time to stay on schedule for medications and try to maintain some semblance of your regular resting and eating schedule back home.
"If your stay is a week or more - then you really have to think about how you acclimate," Bils said.