This was when things took a really dark turn.
After Nine Days Of Russian Sleep Experiment The experimenters deduced that their paranoia was a result of the effects of the exposure to the gas. It extended to the test subjects no longer talking to each other and, in the mistaken bid to win over the researchers’ trust by turning over their co-subjects, alternatively, they began talking in low voices to the microphones and windows. They began to complain about the course of events that led them to this place and began to show fear and paranoia. The researchers continued to monitor them, their communications and movements, and a darker turn in the tone of the conversations took place after the fourth day. Since the passengers had been fed false promises about being freed if they subjected themselves to the test and not sleeping for a month, they complied and hardly complained during the first couple of days.
First Five Days of Russian Sleep Experiment While the room was stocked with sleeping cots and books, there were no bedcovers, running water, a toilet, or even enough dried food to last them all for an entire month.
Since this was in the 1940s, microphones and large one-way mirrored windows were the only tools to monitor these people (CCTV cameras weren’t possible at the time). Since the gas was toxic in large quantities, these five test subjects were kept in a sealed environment where their oxygen levels were kept a close watch on. These five people were political prisoners, determined as enemies of the state during the war, and hence became the test subjects. The sleep experiment takes place in the 1940s, where an experimental gas-based stimulant is to be used to keep five people awake for thirty days, all while being monitored by Russian Researchers. You can read about it here, or if you want the shortened version, you can continue reading down below. You’re either one of two groups of people - those who’ve heard about THE RUSSIAN SLEEP EXPERIMENT.