Sleep deprivation articles from across Nature Portfolio
Sleep deprivation is a state that arises when an organism has less sleep than is optimal, and is followed by a 'rebound' in slow-wave sleep when the opportunity arises. This can be induced experimentally or environmentally (such as shift work), but is also associated with neurological and psychiatric disorders such as dementia, in which normal sleep patterns are disrupted.
Latest Research and Reviews
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Research
| Open AccessSingle-cell transcriptomics and cell-specific proteomics reveals molecular signatures of sleep
Communications Biology 5, 846 -
Research
| Open AccessNine-day continuous recording of EEG and 2-hour of high-density EEG under chronic sleep restriction in mice
Scientific Data 9, 225 -
Reviews
| Open AccessRole of sleep deprivation in immune-related disease risk and outcomes
Communications Biology 4, 1304 -
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Research
| Open AccessSake yeast induces the sleep-promoting effects under the stress-induced acute insomnia in mice
Scientific Reports 11, 20816