Overview
- Editors:
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Ian Hindmarch
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Human Psychopharmacology Research Unit, University of Leeds, GB-Leeds, UK
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Helmut Ott
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Research Laboratories, Section Electrophysiology/Psychometrics, Schering AG, Berlin 65, Germany
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Tom Roth
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Sleep Disorders and Research Center, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, USA
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Table of contents (17 papers)
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Differential Effects of Benzodiazepines
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- H. P. Willumeit, H. Ott, W. Neubert
Pages 182-192
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Résumé
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Front Matter
Pages 193-193
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Back Matter
Pages 203-226
About this book
The following papers were presented at an International Workshop on experi mental methodologies and research strategies in sleep, benzodiazepines and per formance during the VII. International Congress of Psychiatry in Vienna 1983. Authors were asked to examine and review the methods used and the results obtained from the various studies within their particular expertise and to provide guidelines for future strategies in the psychopharmacology of sleep. It has long been felt by sleep researchers, psychopharmacologists and clini cians that the effects of drugs on sleep or even sleep itself cannot be evaluated without reference to the daytime behaviour of the individual. Sleep and daytime performance are complementary aspects of the same circadian cycle. The modifi cation of sleep parameters by hypnotic medication must necessarily have an impact upon daytime behaviour. The overall change in a patient's daytime behaviour following nocturnal administration of a benzodiazepine is of importance when considering the toler ability and safety of the drug in clinical use. Alterations to the integrity of daytime performance also have consequences for that patient's subsequent sleep and nocturnal behaviour. Thus this workshop was conceived as a platform for examining the inter relationship of sleep, benzodiazepine hypnotics and daytime performance from pharmacological, psychological, experimental and clinical standpoints. The fol lowing papers also highlight the complexity of the interaction between sleep, patient, drug and daytime performance and emphasize the need to approach problem areas with appropriate research strategies and experimental method ologies.
Editors and Affiliations
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Human Psychopharmacology Research Unit, University of Leeds, GB-Leeds, UK
Ian Hindmarch
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Research Laboratories, Section Electrophysiology/Psychometrics, Schering AG, Berlin 65, Germany
Helmut Ott
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Sleep Disorders and Research Center, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, USA
Tom Roth