NEW YORK: Sleepwalkers are rarely violent and do not seek out victims while they are in a sleep arousal state. If a sleepwalker does become violent, the victim is usually someone who just got in the way, rather than the target of premeditated violence, a sleep expert concludes after reviewing medical and legal literature on 32 cases.

“Sleepwalkers are not inherently violent,” Dr. Mark R.Pressman of Lankenau Hospital in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania, the study's author, said. “Sleepwalking violence is quite rare.” There's sort of a cartoon-like conception in the general public that sleepwalkers get out of bed with a knife and go looking for someone they're angry with.

But this perception is off-base, he added; sleepwalkers are functioning at a very low level, with the parts of their brains responsible for planning and socialization out of commission.

“Legal cases in which the defendant supposedly went somewhere and sought out the victim are not likely to be true cases ofsleepwalking,” said Pressman, who has acted as an expert witness in such cases.

He undertook his review, published in the journal Sleep, to test the hypothesis that sleepwalkers may harm people who touch them or are close by, but they don't spontaneously attack other people.

He divided the cases into three categories: sleepwalking; confusional arousal, a state identical to sleepwalking but the sleeper doesn't leave the bed; and sleep terrors, or sudden partial awakening due to a frightening stimulus, followed by sleepwalking. In all of the confusional arousal cases, the victim of violence had been close to or touching the attacker, the researcher found, and the same was true in 81 percent of sleep terror cases and 40 to 90 percent of the sleepwalking cases.

“Often the provocation was quite minor and the response greatly exaggerated,” he noted.

Sleepwalking appears to occur when something “goes bump in the night,” but a person doesn't wake up fully in response, Pressman explained. “There's something that interferes with waking up fully from sleep,” he added.

The old advice that people shouldn't wake a sleepwalker is misguided, Pressman noted, because it's actually quite difficult to do so. The best way to cope with sleepwalkers, he added, is to speak to them in a clear voice -- using very simple language -- and attempt to steer them away from dangerous situations and back into bed.

And touch and approach them with care, he added. “There certainly is a possibility if you have a sleepwalker who is big enough to inflict damage and you grab them and you block them they may not respond as you expect, probably because they don't even recognize who you are,” Pressman said.—Reuters

Opinion

Editorial

Centre vs provinces
Updated 10 Jun, 2026

Centre vs provinces

The reason the centre finds itself in this position is rooted in its failure to expand the tax net and boost revenues.
Party in crisis
10 Jun, 2026

Party in crisis

THE young KP chief minister must be starting to realise just how thorny a seat he occupies. There has been a flurry...
Varsity woes
10 Jun, 2026

Varsity woes

FINANCIAL crises affecting public sector universities across Pakistan are now having an impact on academic...
Doctor attacked
09 Jun, 2026

Doctor attacked

AN act of reprehensible violence has shaken the medical community. On Saturday, an employee of the Provincial Civil...
AJK flare-up
Updated 09 Jun, 2026

AJK flare-up

The situation started deteriorating after a trader affiliated with the JAAC was reportedly shot in an altercation with law-enforcers.
Fault lines
09 Jun, 2026

Fault lines

THE April 8 ceasefire that halted hostilities between Israel and Iran has encountered its most serious test yet....