Environmental Entrainment of Circadian Rhythms

  • Bruce V
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Abstract

The term circadian rhythm, proposed by Halberg, will be used in this paper to refer to those biological rhythms which have a period length of about (circa) a day (diem). These rhythms generally persist in constant darkness at constant temperature and sometimes also in continuous light with a period which is approximately—not exactly—24 hours, hence the term circa. It is desirable to refer to the period in such conditions as the free-running-period rather than the natural period [1,2] since the period may be affected—only to a small extent, but measurably—by a number of factors which are discussed later. The basic rhythmic system is endogenous and innate. The organism inherits the basic oscillatory system, and the rhythm may be initiated by non-periodic signals. The endogenous rhythm may be entrained (see below) by exogenous factors and, as Aschoff [3] has pointed out, there may be exogenous components to the entrained rhythm.

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APA

Bruce, V. G. (1960). Environmental Entrainment of Circadian Rhythms. Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology, 25(0), 29–48. https://doi.org/10.1101/sqb.1960.025.01.005

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