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Nodes of term Sleep

Sleep is a natural state of bodily rest observed in humans and other animals. It is distinguished from quiet wakefulness by a decreased ability to react to stimuli, and it is more easily reversible than hibernation or coma. It is common to all mammals and birds, and is also seen in many reptiles, amphibians, and fish.
  • Are sleeping pills good for you?
  • Behavioral aspects of sleep in bottlenose dolphin mothers and their calves
  • Behavioral sleep in the walrus
  • Cetacean sleep: An unusual form of mammalian sleep
  • Clues to the functions of mammalian sleep
  • Continuous activity in cetaceans after birth
  • Do all animals sleep?
  • Electroencephalogram asymmetry and spectral power during sleep in the northern fur seal
  • Fur Seals Display a Strong Drive for Bilateral Slow-Wave Sleep While on Land
  • How much sleep do we actually need?
  • Sleep and Dreaming
  • Sleep in animals: a state of adaptive inactivity
  • Sleep viewed as a state of adaptive inactivity
  • The REM Sleep-Memory Consolidation Hypothesis
  • Unearthing the Phylogenetic Roots of Sleep
  • Why We Sleep

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