Difference between revisions of "Periodic respiratory pattern occurring in conjunction with eye movements during sleep"
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(Created page with "''Aserinsky E (1965) Periodic respiratory pattern occurring in conjunction with eye movements during sleep. Science 150:697 763–6'' '''Abstract:''' With each flurry of rapi...") |
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''Aserinsky E (1965) Periodic respiratory pattern occurring in conjunction with eye movements during sleep. Science 150:697 763–6'' | ''Aserinsky E (1965) Periodic respiratory pattern occurring in conjunction with eye movements during sleep. Science 150:697 763–6'' | ||
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+ | '''[https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/1717119.pdf?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents Link to Article]''' | ||
'''Abstract:''' With each flurry of rapid eye movements during the sleep of human subjects there is a decreased amplitude of respiration and a slight increase in rate. Occasionally the rhythmic breathing pattern may even resemble Cheyne-Stokes respiration. The consistency of this breathing pattern suggests that respiration in this stage of sleep is not a direct function of dream content. | '''Abstract:''' With each flurry of rapid eye movements during the sleep of human subjects there is a decreased amplitude of respiration and a slight increase in rate. Occasionally the rhythmic breathing pattern may even resemble Cheyne-Stokes respiration. The consistency of this breathing pattern suggests that respiration in this stage of sleep is not a direct function of dream content. | ||
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+ | =Comments and Context= | ||
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+ | *Rapid eye movements in sleep are accompanied by decreased depth and increased rate of breathing with a consistency of pattern that the author suggests cannot be explained by dream content. |
Revision as of 21:10, 11 July 2017
Aserinsky E (1965) Periodic respiratory pattern occurring in conjunction with eye movements during sleep. Science 150:697 763–6
Abstract: With each flurry of rapid eye movements during the sleep of human subjects there is a decreased amplitude of respiration and a slight increase in rate. Occasionally the rhythmic breathing pattern may even resemble Cheyne-Stokes respiration. The consistency of this breathing pattern suggests that respiration in this stage of sleep is not a direct function of dream content.
Comments and Context
- Rapid eye movements in sleep are accompanied by decreased depth and increased rate of breathing with a consistency of pattern that the author suggests cannot be explained by dream content.