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. 2010 Aug 9;107(36):15939–15944. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1002570107

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5.

(A) Time course of NREM sleep, NREM episode duration, and number of brief awakenings (BA) during BSL and 2 post-SR recovery days (mean ± SEM, n = 11). Triangles show differences from baseline [Upper, BSL vs. R1; Lower, BSL vs. R2, black, P < 0.05; white, P < 0.1 after significance in rANOVA; NREM sleep, “day”: F(14,210) = 8.87, P = 9.3625e-004, “day” × “time interval”: F(14,210) = 1.73, P = 0.05; NREM episode duration, day: F(14,210) = 5.87, P = 0.0071, day × time interval: F(14,210) = 1.44, P = 0.13; number of BA, day: F(14,210) = 16.5, P = 1.4416e-005, day × time interval: F(14,210) = 1.97, P = 0.0216]. (B) Time course of SWA during BSL and 2 recovery days in F, P, and O (mean ± SEM, n = 8). Triangles show differences from baseline [black, P < 0.05; white, P < 0.1 after significance in rANOVA, interaction factors day × time interval: frontal, F(14,147) = 5.25, P = 5.3376e-008; parietal, F(14,147) = 3.9, P = 1.1684e-005; occipital, F(14,147) = 2.82, P = 9.3817e-004]. (C) Time course of slow wave energy (SWE) in NREM sleep during baseline and 2 recovery days (mean ± SEM, n = 8; symbols as in A). (D) Time course of total (cumulative) SWE computed over all three vigilance states during baseline, SR (shaded area), and 2 recovery days. Mean values (n = 8).