Publication | Closed Access
Encephalic Cycles during Sleep and Wakefulness in Humans: A 24-Hour Pattern
73
Citations
5
References
1969
Year
Sleep DisordersEncephalic CyclesSocial SciencesSleep-related Breathing DisorderHuman SleepSleep PhysiologyNeurology24-Hour PatternCognitive ElectrophysiologyCognitive NeuroscienceSleepCognitive ScienceAlertnessMedicineNeuroimagingInsomniaSleep DisorderNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyEye TrackingNormal SleepNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemCircadian RhythmRapid Eye MovementChronobiologySleep Psychology
Twenty-four-hour polygraphic tracings from normal humans indicate that a pattern of alternating periods of the presence and absence of rapid eye movement, shown to exist for normal sleep, exist over all 24 hours of the daily period. This finding suggests that the so-called sleep-dream cycle of human sleep is not specific to sleep, but is a general activity pattern of the brain.
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