Home / Health / Pink Noise Harmful? New Sleep Study Reveals Surprising Risks
Pink Noise Harmful? New Sleep Study Reveals Surprising Risks
3 Feb
Summary
- Pink noise, meant to aid sleep, reduced deep and REM sleep.
- Combined pink and airplane noise was most disruptive to sleep.
- Earplugs effectively countered noise disruption, preserving sleep quality.

Millions rely on sleep aids, but new research suggests common noise machines could be counterproductive. A study by the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine found that healthy adults exposed to pink noise experienced a reduction in vital sleep stages. Pink noise, a steady broadband sound, was found to disrupt deep sleep, the period crucial for brain detoxification and memory consolidation.
Participants in the study reported lighter, more interrupted sleep and lower overall quality when exposed to pink noise. The disruption was amplified when pink noise was combined with airplane noise, which alone also significantly reduced deep sleep. This effect contrasts with the use of earplugs, which participants found effectively muffled disruptive sounds, leading to deeper and less interrupted sleep.
The research highlights that disrupting deep and REM sleep is linked to serious health issues, including depression, anxiety, and reduced productivity. The study's lead author cautions against the use of broadband noise, particularly for vulnerable populations like newborns and toddlers, and calls for further research into safe usage levels and long-term effects. Earplugs emerged as a reliable method for safeguarding sleep against noise pollution.




