Jerome M. Siegel
Center for Sleep Research
Department of Psychiatry
University of California at Los Angeles
USA
Name/email consistency: high
- Cerebrospinal fluid hypocretin (orexin) levels are elevated by play but are not raised by exercise and its associated heart rate, blood pressure, respiration or body temperature changes. Wu, M.F., Nienhuis, R., Maidment, N., Lam, H.A., Siegel, J.M. Arch. Ital. Biol (2011)
- The neurobiology of sleep. Siegel, J.M. Semin. Neurol (2009)
- Do all animals sleep? Siegel, J.M. Trends Neurosci. (2008)
- Gaps that wake you up. Siegel, J.M. Sleep (2008)
- Narcolepsy and the hypocretin system--where motion meets emotion. Siegel, J.M., Boehmer, L.N. Nature Clinical Practice. Neurology (2006)
- Functional implications of sleep development. Siegel, J.M. PLoS Biol. (2005)
- Clues to the functions of mammalian sleep. Siegel, J.M. Nature (2005)
- Hypocretin (orexin): role in normal behavior and neuropathology. Siegel, J.M. Annu. Rev. Psychol (2004)
- The neurotransmitters of sleep. Siegel, J.M. J. Clin. Psychiatry (2004)
- A brief history of hypocretin/orexin and narcolepsy. Siegel, J.M., Moore, R., Thannickal, T., Nienhuis, R. Neuropsychopharmacology (2001)
- The REM sleep-memory consolidation hypothesis. Siegel, J.M. Science (2001)