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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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Thirty-six hour correspondence between performance and sleepiness cycles.

TL;DR: Results support a theory that the performance and sleep wake cycles are not causally related but rather, may be regulated independently, and support the idea that rhythmicity in performance efficiency and sleepiness are regulated independently.
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Near-total absence of REM sleep co-occurring with normal cognition: an update of the 1984 paper.

TL;DR: This is the only case where REMS loss resulting from pontine lesion was re-evaluated after many years and finds a near-total absence of REMS with no signs of significant compensation throughout adult life, along with normal cognitive status.
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Peripheral arterial tone as an on-line measure of load in a simulated flight task.

TL;DR: PAT amplitude was lower in the difficult level of the continuous task and was further attenuated following the appearance of the flag only when a change in the flight position was required, suggesting the potential utility of PAT as an on-line measure of the joint continuous and discrete demands of a flight mission.
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Obesity plays an independent worsening modifying effect on nocturnal hypoxia in obstructive sleep apnea

TL;DR: The results indicate that obesity plays an independent worsening modifying effect on nocturnal hypoxia in OSAS.
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The effects of evening bright light on next-day sleep propensity.

TL;DR: It is shown that sleep propensity is regulated by a circadian pacemaker that is responsive to evening BL exposure and the effects of BL on the next-day distribution of sleep stages showed an increase of Stage 2 and less REM during the morning.