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. 2015 Mar 18;138(6):1629–1641. doi: 10.1093/brain/awv073

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Epileptic discharges are increased during non-REM sleep. By studying the sleep EEG in patients with focal epilepsies, Frauscher et al. show that the increase is specifically associated with high-amplitude slow waves. In contrast to physiological activity, it occurs at transitions from activation to deactivation states, a period of high synchronization.