A 1-year systematic diary was kept by an anonymous diarist in Hamburg in the year 1755-1756. Sleep, activities, food intake, urine volume, and meteorological data were documented daily. The systematic recording of sleep and naps, with an accuracy of a quarter of an hour allowed analysis of the placement, duration, and consistency of sleep.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objectives: The study presents an automatic method for scoring leg movements in polysomnographic recordings and describes an empirical investigation of its validity.
Design: Leg movements measured by means of the surface electromyogram activation of the right and left tibialis anterior muscle contained in 24 digitally recorded all-night polysomnograms were analyzed visually according to the American Sleep Disorders Association guidelines by 2 experienced raters and automatically scored using a newly developed electromyogram-based analytical method. Two visual scorings and the automatic scoring were compared in pairs using descriptive and confirmative statistical methods.
Novelty conditions may elicit stress responses. First session effects are systematic changes in physiological parameters, resulting from the interference of physiological processes with novelty stress. Along with endocrinological changes, these stress responses may be accompanied by alterations of sensory and attentional processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBodily misperceptions are a frequent symptom in major depressive disorder. A reduced ability to deflect attention from somatosensory stimuli may contribute to the generation of unpleasant bodily sensations and co-occur with altered habituation of the brain electric reactions to somatosensory stimuli. The aim of the present study was to explore whether attention-related components of somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEP) and the habituation of these components are altered in major depression.
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