Relations (1)
related 0.10 — supporting 5 facts
Consciousness and sleep are related as components of distinct physiologic states and behaviors at the organism level, such as wake and sleep, which require coordinated network interactions among systems and sub-systems rather than just structurally intact functioning [1].
Facts (5)
Sources
Exploring “lucid sleep” and altered states of consciousness using ... philosophymindscience.org 2 facts
referenceThe pilot study 'EEG correlates of consciousness during sleep' by Mason, L. I., Alexander, C. N., Travis, F. T., & Gackenbach, J. was published in Lucidity Letter (Volume 9) in 1990.
referenceThe study 'Electrophysiological correlates of higher states of consciousness during sleep in long-term: Practitioners of the transcendental meditation program' by Mason, L. I., Alexander, C. N., Travis, F. T., Marsh, G., Orme-Johnson, D. W., Gackenbach, J., Mason, D. C., Rainforth, M., & Walton, K. G. was published in Sleep in 1997 (Volume 20, issue 2, pages 102–110).
Altered State of Consciousness | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com 1 fact
referenceBosinelli, M. (1995) published 'Mind and consciousness during sleep' in the journal Behavioural Brain Research.
Consciousness | Springer Nature Link link.springer.com 1 fact
claimConsciousness is often defined more narrowly as a level of arousal, wakefulness, alertness, responsiveness, and adaptability, specifically in contrast to states of coma or sleep.
The New Field of Network Physiology: Building the Human ... frontiersin.org 1 fact
claimHaving structurally intact and functioning systems is insufficient to maintain health; coordinated network interactions among systems and sub-systems are required to generate distinct physiologic states and behaviors at the organism level, such as wake, sleep and sleep stages, rest and exercise, stress and anxiety, cognition, consciousness, and unconsciousness.