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Basic Rest-Activity Cycle (BRAC)

Natural biological rhythm discovered by sleep researcher Nathaniel Kleitman involving 90-120 minute cycles of high-frequency brain activity followed by 20-minute recovery periods, present during both sleep and waking hours, forming the scientific foundation for productivity techniques like ultradian rhythm scheduling.

Last updated: 2026-03-18 00:29

Overview

The Basic Rest-Activity Cycle (BRAC) is a biological rhythm discovered by sleep researcher Nathaniel Kleitman that describes naturally occurring cycles of alertness and rest throughout the day. These cycles typically run in 90-120 minute patterns, alternating between periods of high mental performance and necessary recovery.

Scientific Foundation

Kleitman observed these rhythms in both sleeping and waking states:

How BRAC Works

High-Activity Phase (90-120 minutes)

During the active phase:

Rest Phase (15-20 minutes)

Following active work:

Application to Productivity

Work with your natural rhythms:

Research Findings

A 2023 study in the Journal of Cognition showed professionals who aligned work with 90-minute cycles reported 40% higher productivity compared to those working in random intervals.

Practical Implementation

  1. Schedule focused work in 90-minute blocks
  2. When concentration wanes, take a break
  3. Use 15-20 minutes for true rest (not email/social media)
  4. Return to work refreshed for next cycle
  5. Typically accommodate 4-5 cycles per workday

Note on Evidence

While widely cited, some research hasn't found strict 90-minute periodicity in all cognitive performance measures, suggesting individual variation exists.

Related Methods

Pricing

Free — applying knowledge of biological rhythms costs nothing.

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