Publications by authors named "W P Koella"

The various stages of sleep are characterized by specific vigilance profiles across the universe of available behavioral systems. The induction and structuring of sleep and its adaptation to a variety of internal needs is the result of a general vigilance-controlling apparatus.

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beta-Adrenoreceptor antagonists are liable to produce behavioural side-effects such as drowsiness, fatigue, lethargy, sleep disorders, nightmares, depressive moods, and hallucinations. These undesirable actions indicate that beta-blockers affect not only peripheral autonomic activity but also some central nervous mechanisms. In experimental animals beta-blockers have been found to reduce spontaneous motor activity, to counteract isolation-, lesion-, stimulation- and amphetamine-induced hyperactivity, and to produce slow-wave and paradoxical sleep disturbances.

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Biochemical, pharmacological and neurophysiological research has produced an ever increasing amount of evidence that a variety of (putative) neurotransmitter (NT) mechanisms is implicated in the gross regulation of the many waking behaviours as well as in the organization of sleep. Yet, few of these experimental findings have yielded information as to the exact--specific and detailed--role played by anyone of these "wet" transmission systems in this whole regulatory and organizational function. Based on a new "Universal Concept of Vigilance" we were led to conclude that the actions and influences of at least some of these humoral transmission instruments are considerably better understood, if they are interpreted as being the main controlling instruments of the many local vigilances--the individual levels of responsiveness in the many behavioral systems that are responsible for the making of the many behavioral components.

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