F
Florian Chapotot
Researcher at University of Chicago
Publications - 42
Citations - 2117
Florian Chapotot is an academic researcher from University of Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Polysomnography & Non-rapid eye movement sleep. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 42 publications receiving 1922 citations. Previous affiliations of Florian Chapotot include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & Claude Bernard University Lyon 1.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Sleep during Ramadan intermittent fasting.
TL;DR: The effects of Ramadan fasting on nocturnal sleep, with an increase in sleep latency and a decrease in SWS and REM sleep, and changes in Tre, were attributed to the inversion of drinking and meal schedule, rather than to an altered energy intake which was preserved in this study.
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Major depressive disorder, sleep EEG and agomelatine: an open-label study.
Maria-Antonia Quera Salva,Bernard Vanier,Judith Laredo,S. Hartley,Florian Chapotot,Catherine Moulin,Frédéric Lofaso,Christian Guilleminault +7 more
TL;DR: In conclusion agomelatine improved sleep continuity and quality and normalized the distribution of SWS sleep and delta power throughout the night.
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Feature selection for sleep/wake stages classification using data driven methods
TL;DR: The results show that using a simple set of features such as relative EEG powers in five frequency bands yields an agreement of 71% with the whole database classification of two human experts, which are within the range of existing classification systems.
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Temporal Disorganization of Circadian Rhythmicity and Sleep-Wake Regulation in Mechanically Ventilated Patients Receiving Continuous Intravenous Sedation
Brian K. Gehlbach,Florian Chapotot,Rachel Leproult,Harry Whitmore,Jason T. Poston,Mark C. Pohlman,Annette Miller,Anne S. Pohlman,Arlet Nedeltcheva,John Jacobsen,Jesse B. Hall,Eve Van Cauter +11 more
TL;DR: The finding that most subjects exhibited preserved, but phase delayed, excretion of aMT6s suggests that the circadian pacemaker of such patients may be free-running, and the circadian rhythms of patients receiving mechanical ventilation and intravenous sedation exhibit pronounced temporal disorganization.
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Sleep restriction increases free fatty acids in healthy men.
Josiane L. Broussard,Florian Chapotot,Varghese Abraham,Andrew Day,Fanny Delebecque,Harry Whitmore,Esra Tasali +6 more
TL;DR: Sleep restriction in healthy men results in increased nocturnal and early-morning NEFA levels, which may partly contribute to insulin resistance and the elevated diabetes risk associated with sleep loss.