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A manual of standardized terminology, techniques and scoring system for sleep stages of human subjects
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The article was published on 1968-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 11993 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Sleep Stages & Hypnogram.read more
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The sleep of long-haul truck drivers
TL;DR: Long-haul truck drivers in this study obtained less sleep than is required for alertness on the job and the greatest vulnerability to sleep or sleep-like states is in the late night and early morning.
Journal ArticleDOI
Where the BOLD signal goes when alpha EEG leaves
Helmut Laufs,John L. Holt,Robert Elfont,Michael Krams,Joseph Suresh Paul,Joseph Suresh Paul,Karsten Krakow,Andreas Kleinschmidt,Andreas Kleinschmidt +8 more
TL;DR: The pattern of brain activation observed during spontaneous power reduction in the alpha band depends on the general level of brain activity as indexed over a broader spectral range in the EEG, and is related to the concepts of 'resting state' and 'default mode'.
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Spontaneous neural activity during human slow wave sleep
Thien Thanh Dang-Vu,Manuel Schabus,Martin Desseilles,Geneviève Albouy,Mélanie Boly,Annabelle Darsaud,Steffen Gais,Géraldine Rauchs,Virginie Sterpenich,Gilles Vandewalle,Julie Carrier,Gustave Moonen,Evelyne Balteau,Christian Degueldre,André Luxen,Christophe Phillips,Pierre Maquet +16 more
TL;DR: This study demonstrates that SWS is not a state of brain quiescence, but rather is an active state during which brain activity is consistently synchronized to the slow oscillation in specific cerebral regions.
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Development of the Brain's Default Mode Network from Wakefulness to Slow Wave Sleep
Philipp G. Sämann,Renate Wehrle,D. Hoehn,Victor I. Spoormaker,Henning Peters,Carolin Tully,Florian Holsboer,Michael Czisch +7 more
TL;DR: Functional connectivity analysis of rs-fMRI series obtained from 25 healthy participants found significant changes in DMN/ACN integrity throughout the NREM sleep, and it is submitted that preserved corticocortical synchronization could represent a prerequisite for maintaining internal and external awareness.
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Longitudinal Association of Sleep-Related Breathing Disorder and Depression
TL;DR: In this article, a population-based epidemiological study assesses sleep-related breathing disorder (SRBD) as a longitudinal predictor of depression and shows that an increase of 1 SRBD category (eg, from minimal to mild SRBD) was associated with a 1.8-fold increased adjusted odds for development of depression.