The mammalian brain oscillates through three distinct global activity states: wakefulness, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and REM sleep. The regulation and function of these 'vigilance' or 'behavioural' states can be investigated over a broad range of temporal and spatial scales and at different levels of functional organization, i.e. from gene expression to memory, in single neurons, cortical columns or the whole brain and organism. We summarize some basic questions that have arisen from recent approaches in the quest for the functions of sleep. Whereas traditionally sleep was viewed to be regulated through top-down control mechanisms, recent approaches have emphasized that sleep is emerging locally and regulated in a use-dependent (h...
The function of sleep is a longstanding mystery of the brain. By contrast, the function of resting s...
In ancient mythology, sleep was often regarded as an inactive state, close to death. Research in the...
Animals and humans spend on average one third of their lives in sleep, but its functions remain to b...
Sleep is truly one of the biggest mysteries in behavioral neuroscience. Humans spend a substantial p...
Sleep and wakefulness are traditionally considered as two mutually exclusive states with contrasting...
Sleep is a complex, global and reversible behavioral state of all mammals, that is homeostatically r...
The traditional view of sleep and wakefulness as two distinct and mutually exclusive states has bee...
In spite of the uniform appearance of sleep as a behavior, the sleeping brain does not produce elect...
This review summarizes the brain mechanisms controlling sleep and wakefulness. Wakefulness promoting...
The homeostatic regulation of sleep manifests as a relative constancy of its total daily amount, and...
The need for sleep increases during wakefulness and decreases during sleep. This process, termed Pro...
Sleep is a complex physiological process that is regulated globally, regionally, and locally by both...
Sleep is a fundamental physiological function and regulates many complex physiological aspects, such...
SummaryWhy we sleep remains one of the enduring unanswered questions in biology. At its core, sleep ...
In the last decades a substantial knowledge about sleep mechanisms has been accumulated. However, th...
The function of sleep is a longstanding mystery of the brain. By contrast, the function of resting s...
In ancient mythology, sleep was often regarded as an inactive state, close to death. Research in the...
Animals and humans spend on average one third of their lives in sleep, but its functions remain to b...
Sleep is truly one of the biggest mysteries in behavioral neuroscience. Humans spend a substantial p...
Sleep and wakefulness are traditionally considered as two mutually exclusive states with contrasting...
Sleep is a complex, global and reversible behavioral state of all mammals, that is homeostatically r...
The traditional view of sleep and wakefulness as two distinct and mutually exclusive states has bee...
In spite of the uniform appearance of sleep as a behavior, the sleeping brain does not produce elect...
This review summarizes the brain mechanisms controlling sleep and wakefulness. Wakefulness promoting...
The homeostatic regulation of sleep manifests as a relative constancy of its total daily amount, and...
The need for sleep increases during wakefulness and decreases during sleep. This process, termed Pro...
Sleep is a complex physiological process that is regulated globally, regionally, and locally by both...
Sleep is a fundamental physiological function and regulates many complex physiological aspects, such...
SummaryWhy we sleep remains one of the enduring unanswered questions in biology. At its core, sleep ...
In the last decades a substantial knowledge about sleep mechanisms has been accumulated. However, th...
The function of sleep is a longstanding mystery of the brain. By contrast, the function of resting s...
In ancient mythology, sleep was often regarded as an inactive state, close to death. Research in the...
Animals and humans spend on average one third of their lives in sleep, but its functions remain to b...