Seasonal changes in human sleep-wake rhythm in Antarctica and Japan

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Abstract

The subjects were eight men of the Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition (average age 35.8 years), and 10 healthy people living around Kofu, Japan (28.9 years). They completed a sleep log for 12 to 18 months, and the sleep-wake state was scored in 10-min epochs. Q24 values calculated by χ2 periodgram were low in the Antarctic midwinter. This means that there was difficulty in synchronizing to a 24-h period in the Antarctic midwinter. In Antarctica, sleep onset and offset times were delayed mostly in the midwinter. In Japan, sleep offset time was delayed mostly around the winter solstice.

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Usui, A., Obinata, I., Ishizuka, Y., Okado, T., Fukuzawa, H., & Kanba, S. (2000). Seasonal changes in human sleep-wake rhythm in Antarctica and Japan. In Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences (Vol. 54, pp. 361–362). https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1440-1819.2000.00715.x

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