P
Paul Baldwin
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 5
Citations - 2516
Paul Baldwin is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Slow-wave sleep & K-complex. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 2419 citations. Previous affiliations of Paul Baldwin include Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Regional cerebral blood flow throughout the sleep-wake cycle. An H2(15)O PET study
Allen R. Braun,Thomas J. Balkin,N J Wesenten,Richard E. Carson,M. Varga,Paul Baldwin,S. Selbie,Gregory Belenky,Peter Herscovitch +8 more
TL;DR: Stages of sleep may be characterized by activation of widespread areas of the brain, including the centrencephalic, paralimbic and unimodal sensory regions, with the specific exclusion of areas which normally participate in the highest order analysis and integration of neural information.
Regional cerebral blood flow throughout the sleep- wake cycle
Allen R. Braun,Thomas J. Balkin,Nancy J. Wesensten,Richard E. Carson,M. Varga,Paul Baldwin,S. Selbie,Gregory Belenky,Peter Herscovitch +8 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Dissociated pattern of activity in visual cortices and their projections during human rapid eye movement sleep.
Allen R. Braun,Thomas J. Balkin,Thomas J. Balkin,Nancy J. Wesensten,Nancy J. Wesensten,Fuad G. Gwadry,Fuad G. Gwadry,Richard E. Carson,Richard E. Carson,M. Varga,M. Varga,Paul Baldwin,Paul Baldwin,Gregory Belenky,Gregory Belenky,Peter Herscovitch,Peter Herscovitch +16 more
TL;DR: A model for brain mechanisms subserving REM sleep where visual association cortices and their paralimbic projections may operate as a closed system dissociated from the regions at either end of the visual hierarchy that mediate interactions with the external world is suggested.
Journal ArticleDOI
The process of awakening: a PET study of regional brain activity patterns mediating the re-establishment of alertness and consciousness.
Thomas J. Balkin,Allen R. Braun,Nancy J. Wesensten,Keith J. Jeffries,M. Varga,Paul Baldwin,Gregory Belenky,Peter Herscovitch +7 more
TL;DR: Assessment of changes in regional cerebral blood flow upon awakening from stage 2 sleep suggested that the dissipation of sleep inertia effects (post-awakening performance and alertness deficits) is effected by reactivation of these regions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Complex Partial Seizures: Cerebellar Metabolism
TL;DR: Patients with complex partial seizures have cerebellar hypo‐metabolism that is bilateral and due only in part to the effect of PHT, and patients with <5 years total PHT exposure had lower LCMRglu, but the differences were not significant.