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Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of sleep deprivation on sleep in rats with suprachiasmatic lesions.

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TLDR
It is concluded that the homeostatic component of sleep regulation is morphologically and functionally distinct from the circadian component.
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This article is published in Neuroscience Letters.The article was published on 1983-11-21. It has received 169 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Neuroscience of sleep & Free-running sleep.

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Contribution of the circadian pacemaker and the sleep homeostat to sleep propensity, sleep structure, electroencephalographic slow waves, and sleep spindle activity in humans

TL;DR: Analyses of the (nonadditive) interaction of the circadian and sleep-dependent components of sleep propensity and sleep structure revealed that the phase relation between the sleep-wake cycle and the circadian pacemaker during entrainment promotes the consolidation of sleep and wakefulness and facilitates the transitions between these vigilance states.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlates of Sleep and Waking in Drosophila melanogaster

TL;DR: Drosophila rest is characterized by an increased arousal threshold and is homeostatically regulated independently of the circadian clock, which implicate the catabolism of monoamines in the regulation of sleep and waking in the fly.
Journal ArticleDOI

Control of Sleep and Wakefulness

TL;DR: Genetic studies suggest that brain mechanisms controlling waking and NREM sleep are strongly conserved throughout evolution, underscoring their enormous importance for brain function.
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The two-process model of sleep regulation: a reappraisal

TL;DR: Sleep appears to have not only a short‐term, use‐dependent function; it also serves to enforce rest and fasting, thereby supporting the optimization of metabolic processes at the appropriate phase of the 24‐h cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rest in Drosophila Is a Sleep-like State

TL;DR: To facilitate the genetic study of sleep, it is documented that rest behavior in Drosophila melanogaster is a sleep-like state, and normal homeostatic regulation depends on the timeless but not the period central clock gene.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Neural regulation of circadian rhythms.

Benjamin Rusak, +1 more
Journal ArticleDOI

Sleep-deprivation: Effects on sleep and EEG in the rat

TL;DR: It is proposed that due to the existence of an intensity dimension, NREM-sleep is finely regulated around its baseline level, and thus may be readily and accurately adjusted to current ‘needs’, whereas REM-sleep, lacking an apparent intensity gradient, is regulated around a level which is considerably below baseline.
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