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Peretz Lavie

Researcher at Technion – Israel Institute of Technology

Publications -  320
Citations -  22662

Peretz Lavie is an academic researcher from Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sleep apnea & Sleep disorder. The author has an hindex of 81, co-authored 320 publications receiving 21532 citations. Previous affiliations of Peretz Lavie include Tel Aviv University & Ben-Gurion University of the Negev.

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Self-reported sleep duration--what does it mean?

TL;DR: The present issue of JSR includes two papers that investigated the relationship between self-reported sleep duration and cognitive functioning in large populations in Finland and Spain, with interesting information on the meaning of subjective long and short sleep duration.
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Ultrashort sleep-wake cycle: timing of REM sleep. Evidence for sleep-dependent and sleep-independent components of the REM cycle.

TL;DR: The results suggest that although the activation of the REM oscillator is dependent on a critical accumulation of NREM sleep, once activated, it continues to function during brief periods of waking.
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HISTORICAL NOTE: Frédéric Bremer 1892–1982: a pioneer in sleep research

TL;DR: It is found that Bremer's interest in sleep resulted from his unexpected observations after transecting the brain at the midcollicular level in the "encéphale isolé" preparation, and his views that sleep is a passive phenomenon imposed on the brain because of deafferentation was shared by most of his contemporaries.
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Further observations on sleep abnormalities in Kleine-Levin syndrome: abnormal breathing pattern during sleep.

TL;DR: In two adolescent and two adult patients with Kleine-Levin syndrome, polygraphic sleep recording performed during somnolent and non-somnolENT periods revealed various forms of abnormal breathing patterns during sleep.
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Short-term rhythms in the performance of a simple motor task.

TL;DR: The findings are interpreted to indicate rhythmic modulations in the efficiency of short-term storage and information processing from movement execution in motor behavior.