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.
CITATION STYLE
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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